Drum Solo: Difference between revisions
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[[File:DrumSolo.jpg|thumb|excerpt from the technical rider of DrumSolo-on-tour| |
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[[category:Lighting designs described as experienced]] |
[[category:Lighting designs described as experienced]] |
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The opening solo out of the performance 'Continuum, solo et duos sur place' by ''Brice leroux'' |
The opening solo out of the performance 'Continuum, solo et duos sur place' by ''Brice leroux'' |
Revision as of 19:41, 26 December 2022
The opening solo out of the performance 'Continuum, solo et duos sur place' by Brice leroux
Factual Description by Jan Maertens
Introducing the single beat kick-off of the Steve Reich's Drumming composition, makes the house lights dim to end up in pitch black surroundings. Almost immediately after, we start perceiving the lighting up of a whitish rectangular canvas, heigh and narrow, somewhere deep on stage. And in relation to that canvas there is a shadow figurine standing without it being clear wether the figurine is in front or behind the canvas. The musical beat doubles out step by step to slowly become a complex rhythmical phrase. With great precision, the figurine embodies the drumming beat by swinging its knees left and right while keeping the rest of its body totally immobile. The canvas seems growing very gently in light intensity, be it in absolute contrast to the total darkness of the surroundings. And the shadow figurine keeps swinging its knees perfectly in pace with the music.
After a little while, we start perceiving an actual body lighting up from its shadow, as if the shadow figurine has moved from behind the canvas in front of it. The body takes the same colour tone as the canvas: a coldish, greyish no-colour. Only the head stays a shadow. Nothing but the knees move and the arms stay stiffly aligned to the torso. The initial position is maintained: all happens 'sur place'. At first, one feels lights do not get brighter anymore (or does it get less bright after all?), but the big contrast with the dark surroundings makes what needs to be seen, clearly visible. Though without clear notice, the canvas seems to slowly dim out and disappear from the focus to leave a finally fully dia-positive image of a weirdly kinetic body. There's only one unique focus for the eyes, marking only a knee shaking body on one's retina.
The full dia-positivity doesn't seem to last long and the canvas is clearly lighting up again, be it this time with a different, warmer, colour contrast to the body... after which both body and canvas are slowly merging to one another's colour tone to finally but almost unnoticeably having shifted towards in the opposite: a warm body onto a cold canvas. The music starts to gear down in complexity step by step, resulting in a seemingly unwinding but still steadily knee-shaking body returning to becoming a shadow figurine again.... back to a single repetitive beat, back to the dia-negative image from the beginning, be it this time clearly much lower in light. One starts to feel them eyes really at work and it becomes hard to judge one's distance to what is being perceived.
The beat starts doubling out again and the music slowly grows towards yet another form of complexity. Colour tones shift again. And when the figurine becomes a positive body once more, it is as if it has been moving through the canvas. The canvas seems to have become a layer from which we can almost define ourselves its opacity towards the body just by the focus and staring we guide our eyes to do with the very low intensities we ended up in by now. And while doing so, focussing and staring and again letting go, it seems that the body is moving in space: growing big and up front or growing small while moving backwards. Not knowing anymore framing things dia-positively or dia-negatively.
When the drumming music slowly grows towards a climax, the light slowly dims down very low, leaving us with a solemn focus onto a dia-positive beheaded body unidentifiably positioned, or by time to time, even floating in the realm of total darkness. Along with its knees swinging to the beat, the upper part of the body starts to make gentle little vertical jojo movements as to express the ever growing complexity in the music. Also the arms come loose from the torso where they had been stiffly parked till now, to gently shiver in a similar way the complexity of the rhythm almost inevitably becomes melody. Doing so, and while working really hard with our eyes in the ever darkening conditions, the kinetic dia-positive body gets surrounded by a genuine light halo following the events with a tiny delay ... before finally dissolving in the realm of the darkness for good, leaving a frozen halo image on the retina as a last memory.
On the last drum beat, we're back in total silent darkness. And while the house lights slowly dim up, we're allowed to re-connect to time and space while wondering wether this trip was real or just a lighting fata morgana.
Credits
IDEA/CONCEPT/CHOREOGRAPHY/LIGHTS Brice Leroux
MUSIC Steve Reich ('Drumming: part 1')
SOUND ENGINEERING Alex Fostier
LIGHT ENGINEERING Hans Meijer, Jan Mertens