World premiere by the Nederlands Dans Theater at the Muziektheatre, Amsterdam, January 26th, 1988. Premiere by the Compañía Nacional de Danza at the Teatro Romea, Murcia, October 6th, 1990.
Arenalis
choreography by Nacho Duato,
inspired by songs of María
del Mar Bonet. In this ballet,
the choreographer’s purpose
has been to show the uninhibited
cheerfulness of the Mediterranean
personality contrasting with
the everyday struggle of life.
Duato makes this contrast very
obvious. On the one hand, there
is the dancing of a group of
men and women motivated by the
pure joyfulness of music. Its
jubilation is reflected in the
clear movements of the dancers -pas
de deux, pas de trois, pas de
quatre- to Greek songs
translated into Catalonian and
Majorcan ones by María
del Mar Bonet.
On the other hand, one woman
dancer stands apart, dancing
alone to four songs which
are performed a capella.
These songs are of a realistic
content and seem to arise
from an agonizing outcry
of the heart. The dancer’s
movements are nearer to the
ground than those of the
others. This is to express
the influence of the land.
Colour, choreography, movement,
everything is undeniably
Mediterranean.
Nacho Duato had worked before
with María del Mar Bonet
in another ballet:
Jardí Tancat. “Her
music constitutes an important
source of inspiration for
my work”, says the choreographer. “Later,
while I was listening to her
record
Gavines i Dragons, the
idea of
Arenal immediately occurred
to me. At once, I began to consider
the possibility of María
del Mar Bonet joining us to give
a live performance of her songs”.
Duato sees
Arenal as an extension
of his first work,
Jardí Tancat, “though
it is more vital, livelier,
and more faithful to the
inner rhythm of the songs
themselves, without abandoning
the worlds of people and
of work”.
I have always known that
my songs were born with rhythm,
but I only became really
aware of it the day Nacho
Duato danced to them. When
I saw the first choreography,
Jardí Tancat, I
was really excited. He
had given them another life.
They were independent, and
at the same time, still mine.
Yet they had acquired a new
palpitation. They had taken
a different road. There is
something in Arenal that
has always fascinated me:
the treatment of the Majorcan
work songs which I sing a
capella. These are songs
which form part of our earliest
Majorcan tradition, but which
are no longer sung where
they come from or what they
were created for, that is
work in the fields. There
are hardly any places in
Majorca where work in the
country is still the same
as forty or fifty years ago.
However, when Nacho used
the songs for
his choreographies he gave
them back this role of
unique pieces, as if they
were precious stones.
While
Jardí Tancat, was
so full of life, in Arenal
I have been discovering
an inner passion each time
I sing with them. I will
never tire of repeating
that these choreographies
of Nacho Duato are
one of the most precious
artistic gifts I have ever
received. I believe they
belong to that type of
thing which goes hand in
hand with the most deeply
felt emotions and is hard
to explain in words.
Thank
you, Nacho.