Chapter - Elephant Swan Space Grace
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 March 2023
Summary
What is the origin of dance? According to one distinguished authority, dance precedes speech, precedes thinking, precedes feeling itself. Dance is the very first art of being human. The distinguished authority I have in mind is Ludwig van Beethoven, who described the beginning of his ballet The Creatures of Prometheus as follows:
The two [statues] move slowly across the stage from the background.—P[rometheus] … is pleased when he sees that his plan is such a success; he is inexpressibly delighted, stands up and beckons to the children to stop—They turn slowly towards him in an expressionless manner… . He explains to them that they are his work, that they belong to him, that they must be thankful to him, kisses and caresses them.—However, still in an emotionless manner, they sometimes merely shake their heads, are completely indifferent, and stand there, groping in all directions.
Prometheus has shaped clay into a man and a woman, and animated them with the fire that he stole from heaven; but he is disappointed that they are just zombies, brainless creatures capable only of blank, uncertain movement. The music that Beethoven wrote to accompany their coming to life is startling: first we hear a vague, rhythmless prelude, then Prometheus’ temporary pleasure in his new creation. How are these half-baked gingerbread figures to be turned into a man and a woman capable of reason and affection? Prometheus ponders the problem and decides to take them to Parnassus, where Apollo and the Muses will instruct them how to be human by means of music and dance. As the scenario puts it:
Euterpe, assisted by Amphion, starts to play music, and at the sound of their harmonies the two young people start to show signs of understanding, of the power of reflection, of an appreciation of the beauties of nature and of human feeling.
The intelligent and moving scenario was devised by the great choreographer Salvatore Viganò, who commissioned the music from Beethoven and danced the role of the male Urmensch. By means of various dances from Terpsichore, the Graces, and Bacchus, the new man and woman learn the arts of pleasure and the arts of war.
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- Music SpeaksOn the Language of Opera, Dance, and Song, pp. 178 - 196Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2009