WEATHER ALERT

Blending blues and ballet

RWB, Bros. Landreth plow new artistic earth with unusual collaboration

Advertisement

Advertise with us

“B” stands for ballet, band, buzz, blue jeans and beer. All of the above were starring players as the Royal Winnipeg Ballet opened its three-performance run of Ballet & the Band Thursday, marking its inaugural production at the Club Regent Event Centre.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 29/03/2019 (2660 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

“B” stands for ballet, band, buzz, blue jeans and beer. All of the above were starring players as the Royal Winnipeg Ballet opened its three-performance run of Ballet & the Band Thursday, marking its inaugural production at the Club Regent Event Centre.

The 135-minute program (with two intermissions) featured a trio of contemporary works including two world premières choreographed by RWB School Professional Division alumni, Jera Wolfe and Larouche (also a former company dancer, who uses only his surname professionally), with the latter harnessing the raw talent of Winnipeg roots band the Bros. Landreth. The troupe also treated the near capacity, multi-generational crowd to Mark Godden’s Miroirs, last performed during the RWB’s retrospective show Our Story in November 2018.

Larouche’s Next of Kin examines the intergenerational impact of addiction, with the contemporary, 35-minute ballet depicting the generically titled, 20-something Brother (second soloist Liam Caines) “battling addiction since his teens,” his Husband (second soloist Ryan Vetter) and Sister (soloist Alanna McAdie). The Winnipeg-based choreographer seamlessly integrates the onstage band with the full company, including having individual dancers subtly moving microphone stands for the two real-life brothers from St. Boniface: guitarist Joey Landreth and bassist Dave Landreth, who appeared like kids in a candy shop.

Liam Caines (left) and Ryan Vetter dance in front of the Bros. Landreth during a unique collaboration between the local roots band and the Royal Winnipeg Ballet. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press)
Liam Caines (left) and Ryan Vetter dance in front of the Bros. Landreth during a unique collaboration between the local roots band and the Royal Winnipeg Ballet. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press)

It bears mentioning that these guys are the real deal as rising Canadian stars. They garnered a Juno Award for their 2013 debut album Let it Lie, and their sophomore release, ’87, is slated for this fall. Their molten, sublimely blended vocals nearly upstaged the dancers several times, with the siblings joined by drummer Daniel Roy and keyboardist Liam Duncan.

Ballet is arguably at its best when it delves into the tangles of human relationships. Larouche creates an effective dynamic between Caines and Vetter, particularly compelling during their series of always fascinating male pas de deux that took advantage of the two men’s physical prowess and natural athleticism, including some tricky lifts grounded in trust.

Kudos also to McAdie as Brother’s hearing-impaired Sister, who sensitively communicates via American Sign Language to Brother (with Joey’s partner, Anna Salgado positioned downstage also signing the song lyrics to the audience), reflecting the musical brothers’ strong allegiance to the deaf community, while respectfully embedding this other reality into the work without making it a prime focus (as with the same-sex marriage between characters). Another nod goes to Vetter for his own lyrical solo that bleeds into a duet with Caines.

An ensemble of Female Ancestors and Male Ancestors function ostensibly as a Greek chorus, although their role in the narrative is never really clear. And truthfully, the ballet’s content warning regarding the perils of addictions and self-harm was befuddling, with the work often appearing overtly tame and, in fact, underdeveloped; its own storyline obfuscated with this single viewing that nonetheless elicited loud cheers and a standing ovation from the rapt crowd.

Still, it’s refreshing to see these clearly committed dancers give their all and portray more realistic, grittier characters than storied princesses and swans — as delightful as those characters are — lending a wholly contemporary feel and proving again that this centuries-old art form can still pack a topical punch.

Ryan Vetter (left) and Liam Caines showed off some fascinating male pas de deux that took advantage of their physical prowess, including some tricky lifts. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press)
Ryan Vetter (left) and Liam Caines showed off some fascinating male pas de deux that took advantage of their physical prowess, including some tricky lifts. (Mike Deal / Winnipeg Free Press)

Similarly, Wolfe’s Bare is another ballet of great potential, set to Luke Howard’s Open Heart Story that examines the masks people wear in society. It begins with a cluster of dancers huddled on the floor garbed in costume designer Alena Zharska’s dark pants and beige tops (and fashionable in ballet circles these days, soft socks) that heightens their vulnerability by creating the illusion of greater skin-to skin contact, dramatically lit by Marc Gagnon.

An abundance of unison movement became more visually intriguing when dancers broke into smaller ensembles that added polyphonic texture, as well as more hills and valleys in terms of emotional tone. However, Wolfe — noted as being of Métis heritage and a choreographer, performer and associate artist with Toronto’s Red Sky Performance — also creates several moments of brilliant beauty. Seeing principal dancer Sophia Lee, whose stealthy, panther-like stretching of her limbs enthralled during each of her solos, flipped upside down and tossed like a tumbleweed over the ensemble’s heads elicited open gasps from the viewers, with the entire 20-minute work resonating as a haunting voyage into the inner self.

Finally, Godden’s Miroirs, commissioned by the company in 1995, unfolds as five highly imagistic movements infused with the RWB’s first resident choreographer’s darkly dramatic esthetic and architectural sensibility.

Highlights included Lee and corps de ballet member Tyler Carver’s pas de deux as troubled birds in Oiseaux Tristes, and the wonderfully kinetic Noctuelles, or Une Barque sur L’Ocean. McAdie, soloist Josh Reynolds and corps de ballet member Stephan Azulay reprised their trio from last season, La Vallee des Cloches, including the wonderful trompe d’oeil in which McAdie wildly swings between Reynolds’ and Azulay’s taut arms like a joyous, pealing bell.

Let this go on record: When (or seemingly if) soloist Yosuke Mino, who joined the company in 2002, ever hangs up his ballet slippers for good, may he perform his Alborada del Gracioso solo as his final swan song. This dynamo bounded about the stage like a strappy 20 year old, including explosive leaps as a even more fleshed-out jester, clutching a large white feather quill pen and furled up scroll that evokes forbidden fruit of knowledge. His thrilling performance was a testament to the youthful spirit of this company now poised to celebrate its 80th anniversary season.

The program featured a trio of contemporary works including two world premières choreographed by RWB School Professional Division alumni, Jera Wolfe and Larouche, who teamed up with the Bros. Landreth for added impact. (Mike Deal /Winnipeg Free Press)
The program featured a trio of contemporary works including two world premières choreographed by RWB School Professional Division alumni, Jera Wolfe and Larouche, who teamed up with the Bros. Landreth for added impact. (Mike Deal /Winnipeg Free Press)

Holly.harris@shaw.ca

Holly Harris
Writer

Holly Harris writes about music for the Free Press Arts & Life department.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

RWB, Bros. Landreth plow new artistic earth with unusual collaboration

Holly Harris 6 minute read Preview

RWB, Bros. Landreth plow new artistic earth with unusual collaboration

Holly Harris 6 minute read Friday, Mar. 29, 2019

“B” stands for ballet, band, buzz, blue jeans and beer. All of the above were starring players as the Royal Winnipeg Ballet opened its three-performance run of Ballet & the Band Thursday, marking its inaugural production at the Club Regent Event Centre.

The 135-minute program (with two intermissions) featured a trio of contemporary works including two world premières choreographed by RWB School Professional Division alumni, Jera Wolfe and Larouche (also a former company dancer, who uses only his surname professionally), with the latter harnessing the raw talent of Winnipeg roots band the Bros. Landreth. The troupe also treated the near capacity, multi-generational crowd to Mark Godden’s Miroirs, last performed during the RWB's retrospective show Our Story in November 2018.

Larouche’s Next of Kin examines the intergenerational impact of addiction, with the contemporary, 35-minute ballet depicting the generically titled, 20-something Brother (second soloist Liam Caines) “battling addiction since his teens,” his Husband (second soloist Ryan Vetter) and Sister (soloist Alanna McAdie). The Winnipeg-based choreographer seamlessly integrates the onstage band with the full company, including having individual dancers subtly moving microphone stands for the two real-life brothers from St. Boniface: guitarist Joey Landreth and bassist Dave Landreth, who appeared like kids in a candy shop.

It bears mentioning that these guys are the real deal as rising Canadian stars. They garnered a Juno Award for their 2013 debut album Let it Lie, and their sophomore release, ’87, is slated for this fall. Their molten, sublimely blended vocals nearly upstaged the dancers several times, with the siblings joined by drummer Daniel Roy and keyboardist Liam Duncan.

Read
Friday, Mar. 29, 2019

No stranger to discipline, Winnipeg lawyer’s actions under scrutiny

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

A longtime Winnipeg lawyer with a disciplinary history has withdrawn from practising law while the provincial regulator looks into her conduct.

Gisele Champagne withdrew from law practice effective July 8, says a notice from the Law Society of Manitoba’s chief executive officer, Leah Kosokowsky.

The withdrawal means she is not to conduct any legal work in Manitoba, pending law society investigations.

The notice does not include any details of what the law society is probing.

Red card for FIFA, Infantino

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Red card for FIFA, Infantino

Editorial 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

It took longer than most people thought it would, but U.S. President Donald Trump finally brought his brand of chaos to the men’s World Cup soccer tournament — and immediately soiled the pitch.

Trump was infuriated by a questionable red card shown to top U.S. forward Folarin Balogun during the American team’s July 1 match with Bosnia and Herzegovina — disciplinary action which meant Balogun was ejected from the game and suspended for his country’s next match versus Belgium on Monday, July 6.

Spurred on by officials including Andrew Giuliani (yes, the son of Rudy), director of the White House task force on the World Cup, Trump called up his bosom buddy, FIFA president Gianni Infantino, that very evening to ask that something be done about the suspension. He called Infantino again on July 4.

Lo and behold, FIFA announced July 5 that its disciplinary panel had suspended the application of Balogun’s one-match ban for a year, making him eligible to play in the Belgium game (which the U.S. lost 4-1, by the way). Multiple news reports quickly revealed Trump’s calls to Infantino — reaction was equally swift.

Read
Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Mayor flip-flops on cutting tree-planting budget after intense criticism

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview

Mayor flip-flops on cutting tree-planting budget after intense criticism

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Yesterday at 6:16 PM CDT

Public opposition has prompted Mayor Scott Gillingham to change his mind about chopping $1.2 million from the city’s tree-planting program.

Read
Yesterday at 6:16 PM CDT

Convicted arsonist accused in Walmart blaze, caused $10M in damage

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Preview

Convicted arsonist accused in Walmart blaze, caused $10M in damage

Erik Pindera 3 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 5:05 PM CDT

A convicted arsonist on probation is accused of setting a blaze inside the Walmart at St. Vital Centre on Monday that’s believed to have caused more than $10 million in damage.

“A fire was set in the middle of a busy place,” said Winnipeg Police Service spokesman Const. Claude Chancy.

“It’s a pretty rare incident. We don’t know what the motives were for the suspect committing this act, but (it’s) very lucky that no one was injured or hurt.”

Ronald Marmito Amigo, 47, was arrested by police bail compliance officers on the 300 block of Furby Street on Thursday. He had a small amount of methamphetamine and a lighter on him, police said.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 5:05 PM CDT

Manitoba needs clean, publicly owned data centres

Hersh Seth 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

Some might disagree, but I believe Winnipeg needs an AI data centre. I am not talking about a huge, polluting warehouse that raises electricity prices and sends profits out of the province.

Manitoba was right to be cautious when Premier Wab Kinew rejected a proposed hyperscale AI data centre southeast of Winnipeg. The concern was not just technology. It was scale, electricity use, community impact and whether the benefits would actually last for Manitobans.

That is exactly the kind of debate we should be having. Recent reporting also noted that Kinew did not reject data centres altogether; he distinguished existing and future data centres from hyperscale projects of a much larger order.

But saying no to one giant private project should not mean saying no to digital infrastructure altogether.