An Intellectual Vaudeville With Its Eccentricities: Cheap Lecture and The Cow Piece by Jonathan Burrows and Matteo Fargion
Funda Özokçu
This is a performance about composition in general and where it goes, and perhaps more importantly how it comes about and why, although it doesn’t pretend to answer all or any of these questions.1
It may, however, help to explain why Jonathan Burrows found himself experimenting with words and music after 13 years dancing with the British Royal Ballet, and to know that Matteo Fargion is an Italian composer from London with quite a broad perspective on ways of making music with just about anything you can think of, including 12 model cows. Because this is also a performance about choreography, although probably not in the athletic, tumbling, sprint-around-the-stage-and-nose-dive-for-the-floor sense. Unless the cows get totally beyond the performers’ control of course. And they just might.
Primarily, though, it is a performance about grasping things in a lecture. Here it comes now. Watch closely, the special effects are quite expensive. Read more