Friday, 17 February 2017

Day 5- FINAL PERFORMANCE!


17.02.17 Friday

None of us could believe it but the day of our final performance was here!
We met in the morning and rehearsed our performance. We also tidied our studio which by now had turned rather messy!

Then we made short videos of the rehearsals of the performance to get the feel of a performance and also see how long we were going to be on. We had three performances that day, so we needed to save energy and not overdo it!

In the evening, we changed into our decided costumes. We made our hair and the ladies wore ornaments and bangles. We made traditional bindis for the women and tikas for the men using red lipstick. We could feel the vibe of performance creeping over us!

Come 7 pm and we were on! We performed thrice, each time receiving a thunderous applause. It was hard work and tiring by the end of the day, but a lot of fun.

Some photos from the performance-

Performance photos-




A link to the video of our performance!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vnKrr9KTPRM


At the end of the day, the team also gave me a thank you card for leading them which was absolutely sweet of them!
We were all exhausted after three performances, but I bet everyone went to bed thinking that they were going to miss CoLab indeed!

Thursday, 16 February 2017

Day 4- Almost there!

16.02.17 Thursday

We are almost there! We decided to run through the entire performance today to get a sense of what we need to work on.

Discussing final changes to be made.
I thought of a splendid plan to end the piece with as well. This is a trial version of the final pose!
The nataraja pose representing God Shiva


I noticed that the dancers were struggling with a certain hand-movement. We were actually ahead of schedule and so I decided to break it down for them. Here is a video of me teaching them how to perform it.

Our run throughs of the performance worked. We polished the performance and focused on detail. We also practised really hard to stay in time! We also talked i depth about costumes and make up and presentation.

Rehearsing Clapping Music


 Everyone felt confident about the final performance the next day.


Wednesday, 15 February 2017

Day 3- A step closer to the finished product

14.02.17 Wednesday

This is a day of lot of work and fun!

We all started with a group discussion as usual.
A typical group discussion


We decided that today, musicians and dancers would stay in one room and work together in the true spirit of CoLab instead of breaking out into groups!
Planning together


I revised with the dancers the choreography for the piece the musicians had composed. We then tried performing it start to end. There were quite a few problems with this.

The dancers couldn't hear the harp cues and sometimes it was hard to gauge whether the cue had happened at all. We managed to fix this problem and the dancers stayed more alert.


In the afternoon, we paired a dancer or two dancers with a musician. Then it was decided that we would have a question answer dialogue like improvisation between the two. The group was very excited and dispersed to try this idea out.

The idea was a success and we decided to incorporate it into our project. In the afternoon we decided on how to join the improvisatory section with the main choreography. We successfully managed to make the transition sound and look smooth.
A dancer-musician dialogue 

In the afternoon, we tried to arrange Clapping Music for the instruments and dancers. Daniel, a jazz trumpeter was very helpful in devising harmony.

Arranging Clapping Music







Tuesday, 14 February 2017

Day 2- Rhythm, harmony and choreography

14.02.17 Tuesday

I started the session off with a group discussion. We outlined our challenges and what we wanted from the project. Then we finalised a short plan which required us to arrange Clapping Music and write/choreograph our own minimalist piece of music!

I began with the dancers by doing some warm ups. I used the heel-tap to warm up which you can see in the video.

We worked a bit more on our hand-movements and precision. I taught the dancers how to use their wrists as well.

In the meanwhile, the musicians had worked out 4 rhythms to layer over each other, by taking inspiration from Music for pieces of Wood.

In the afternoon, I let the dancers practice their kathak moves and worked with the musicians. The questions was what tonality to use. We brainstormed many ideas but agreed on using an Indian raga mode to contextualise the music with kathak. I wrote the raga bhairavee mode on a drawing board for the musicians. They decided to use this mode to compose a piece in minimalist style.
me writing on the mode on the drawing board.
We then experimented with various textures and sounds. What combinations of instruments could we use, what ranges would they play in? It was a great exercise in orchestration!

The day ended with a recap of what we had achieved- the musicians shared what they had done and the dancer did the same. The ideas we came up with on this day defined most of our porject's final performance.



Monday, 13 February 2017

Day 1- Trial, errors and challenges

13.2.17 Monday

Today was a long but exciting day. We all met in our designated studio at 9 am (early start!) This itself was a challenge as many people found it difficult or even unreasonable to start so early! This changed however as we progressed into the work for our project and realised that we needed to start early in order to get a lot of work done! As project leader, I had to maintain discipline yet not seem rude and this was being tricky from day one itself!

Entering the Laban building early morning on day one! What a start!




I was slightly nervous but still assured about leading the project. I was relying on the communication the group had established before the actual start of CoLab for smooth functioning. After introducing ourselves to each other, I introduced the project idea and spoke briefly about Kathak and Steve Reich. Then we split and the musicians went off to our breakout space to practice Clapping Music.


I gave the dancers their dancing bells and excitement spread in the studio. The dancers were so intrigued. I helped them fasten their own mini-bells and wore my own bells.

I also had to tell them specifically to take their socks off as contemporary dancers always wear socks but kathak is danced barefoot!

Tying the ghungroos (dancing bells)


Barefoot with the anklets tied securely, the dancers were ready to learn kathak.



I showed the main pose of kathak-upright with mudras in both hands and elbows pointing outwards.

The main pose of kathak


Then, I introduced the foot-taps. "Lift your foot slightly from the back as if youre gently kicking sand but dont kick it- just grip the floor instead." That was how I explained the foot-tap.

I introduced the main types of foot-taps- flat foot, heel and ball of the foot.

I let the dancers practice in the studio and went to look at what the musicians had done. Most of them had managed to master the rhythms. However some were finding them particularly difficult. These musicians were being tutored by the others and they were practising in pairs.

Musicians practicing Clapping Music



After lunch, I taught the dancers hand-movements while the musicians busied themselves with planning how to arrange Clapping Music for their instruments. The dancers found the hand-movements pretty easy. However, when combined with the bending in torso and neck, they began to see how difficult Kathak can get!

Me teaching the dancers hand-movements


The entire group then sat in one room and discussed how to choreograph clapping music. Dancers had ideas of hand-body percussion as well. Musicians had their own ideas. Frankly, I thought there were too many ideas in the pot and no flame to cook the soup! But I let the dancers and musicians experiment and helped to direct the experiments.

By the end of the day, we had prepared a very rough sort of arrangement. There was contemporary dance fused with kathak, hand-body percussion, foot-tapping and music. We performed this for our mentor, Sara.

Group discussion with dance mentor Sara

Sara rightly pointed out that we needed to sort our ideas. She also warned us to look at the title of the project and question the authenticity of what we were doing. She suggested, "If I come to a project titled Kathak meets Steve reich, I want to see Kathak- lot's of it."  She also told the dancers how they must respect kathak and it's tradition. It is a ance form that needs years of mastery and precision is important. I seconded her- Kathak looks straight forward but it had taken me 8 years to perform in public! The group agreed. It was a compeltely valid suggestion. We were exhausted with the day but we thanked Sara and vowed to focus more on pure kathak.

We also found out the our music mentor Paul Newland was severely ill and perhaps would not be able to attend any CoLab!

We all went home leaving behind mistakes , taking back with us lessons learnt from them and preparing for challenges.

Sunday, 12 February 2017

Day 0- Getting set to go..

12.02.17 Sunday
It is the day before CoLab and I am absolutely excited. CoLab for me started as soon as Joe Townsend, the head of CoLab had given us an introductory lecture about it during the induction week. I had immediately thought of the concept of Kathak meets Steve Reich. I remember talking to Joe about it after the lecture and he encouraged me to pursue the concept and propose it when the project pitching start. Indeed I did as he said, and thankfully my proposal was accepted. Now here I am- leading a project comprising of 9 dancers, 9 musicians and myself!
Lots of thoughts are running through my head as I write this. On another Sunday, I would have been reflecting over my week, doing some composition and tidying my room. Not today though- Today, my day schedule consisted of going to the Laban building to practise my own moves , making lists and sending out “to bring” lists to my team. It is past noon yet, I am still working on making sure everything is ready for tomorrow- the anklets I bought for dancers, my own anklets, the technology, the manuscript paper, the sheet music- there are so many little things that count!
A few days ago, I met with my team and chatted to them about the project. I wanted them to understand that although pitched this project and will eventually end up leading it, it is OUR project and we all should contribute. And contribute they did! With ideas tossed at me, it was a lot of work deciding which ideas to keep and which to discard! I love my team already!
I have never led a project this size before and it is a rewarding challenge. CoLab hasnt yet started and I am already learning so many managerial aspects! Tomorrow, the day starts early, at 9 am with me teaching the dancers Kathak moves! I have not taught much Kathak to anyone before, leave aside contemporary dancers and I am really looking forward to it. I wonder how they will respond and interpret the gestures and moves I teach them!
Now it is time for me to contact the team on the Facebook messenger group we have formed. It is time to wear the “leader” cloak again!

Here is the schedule I made for the week-

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8oh5V61TK81a0hrMjZudm1rUmc/view?usp=sharing