Learn about the dances choreographed by Merce Cunningham such as John Cage's Roaratorio and David Tudor Sounddance, both inspired by the Irish author James Joyce
Transcript
[Music in]
DAVID VAUGHAN: "Roaratorio" is a piece that John made out of his reading of "Finnegan's Wake" by James Joyce. With an assistant he toured an island and went around to places where--that were named in the book and recorded sounds there and made a lot of sound recordings from this.
[Music]
John always had the idea that this musical piece should be choreographed by Merce. So Merce started researching Irish folk dances in the library, and then he started choreographing.
[Music]
ROBERT SWINSTON: It's full of rhythms and folk steps, jigs, reels, and it's a lot of fun.
[Music]
ROBERT SWINSTON: One of the other dances that we're doing here, "Sounddance," is also one of Merce's masterpieces.
DAVID VAUGHAN: "Sounddance" actually has also--is a title from James Joyce: "In the beginning was the sounddance."
LISA FOX: It drew a lot of us in, just an extraordinary piece to do.
[Music]
Everyone loves being in that dance. And that is a piece that I saw while I was a student here at Berkeley, performed here at Zellerbach. And I remember sitting up there in the mezzanine and going, "I want to do that."
[Music out]
DAVID VAUGHAN: "Roaratorio" is a piece that John made out of his reading of "Finnegan's Wake" by James Joyce. With an assistant he toured an island and went around to places where--that were named in the book and recorded sounds there and made a lot of sound recordings from this.
[Music]
John always had the idea that this musical piece should be choreographed by Merce. So Merce started researching Irish folk dances in the library, and then he started choreographing.
[Music]
ROBERT SWINSTON: It's full of rhythms and folk steps, jigs, reels, and it's a lot of fun.
[Music]
ROBERT SWINSTON: One of the other dances that we're doing here, "Sounddance," is also one of Merce's masterpieces.
DAVID VAUGHAN: "Sounddance" actually has also--is a title from James Joyce: "In the beginning was the sounddance."
LISA FOX: It drew a lot of us in, just an extraordinary piece to do.
[Music]
Everyone loves being in that dance. And that is a piece that I saw while I was a student here at Berkeley, performed here at Zellerbach. And I remember sitting up there in the mezzanine and going, "I want to do that."
[Music out]