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<channel><title><![CDATA[OWENCOX DANCE GROUP - Articles and Reviews]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews]]></link><description><![CDATA[Articles and Reviews]]></description><pubDate>Wed, 27 May 2026 17:38:38 -0500</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[How Dance can burrow deeply under our skin]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/how-dance-can-burrow-deeply-under-our-skin]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/how-dance-can-burrow-deeply-under-our-skin#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Wed, 13 Jul 2022 19:53:15 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/how-dance-can-burrow-deeply-under-our-skin</guid><description><![CDATA[Article by Steve PaulJuly 12, 2022&#8203;kcstudio.org  I wasn&rsquo;t expecting this. In a darkened theater, as a favorite musician and a troupe of dancers performed on stage, I was beset by rolling tides of emotions. Riding on one wave was an intimate connection with Helen Gillet&rsquo;s aching cello lines and the elegant bodies moving in space just in front of me. On the other was my personal history with modern dance. Together they triggered the kind of interior physical response every artist [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><font color="#2a2a2a"><a href="https://kcstudio.org/how-dance-can-burrow-deeply-under-our-skin/" target="_blank">Article by Steve Paul</a><br />July 12, 2022<br />&#8203;kcstudio.org</font><br /></div>  <div class="paragraph"><font color="#2a2a2a">I wasn&rsquo;t expecting this. In a darkened theater, as a favorite musician and a troupe of dancers performed on stage, I was beset by rolling tides of emotions. Riding on one wave was an intimate connection with Helen Gillet&rsquo;s aching cello lines and the elegant bodies moving in space just in front of me. On the other was my personal history with modern dance. Together they triggered the kind of interior physical response every artist hopes to achieve.<br />Earlier in the week, I&rsquo;d spent a couple of hours watching and hearing parts of this concert developing in rehearsal. That was an arm&rsquo;s length experience, made more so by my efforts to capture photographs and video of the proceedings. (Yes, I know, if you really want to live in the here-and-now, put down the<br />damn camera.)<br />In its formal presentation in April, Owen/Cox Dance Group&rsquo;s production of &ldquo;Skin&rdquo; &mdash; a concert-length sequence of Gillet&rsquo;s songs, several sung in French, and her hyperactive, loop-boosted cello inventions &mdash; ascended to a wholly remarkable level.<br />Dance, of course, is one of the most ancient of art forms. We can all imagine our ancestors motioning around the fire, sharing wisdom, making visual poetry in the eons before speech and writing.<br />I never really learned to dance, except in that free-form, clunky way of teendom. But I did somehow, years ago, gain an appreciation for the modern stream of dance. Watching the quintet of Owen/Cox dancers sent me back to the place from where I calibrate my interest. It was a concert-lecture by the composer John Cage and choreographer Merce Cunningham, whose liquid range of motion embodied a kind of magic. I knew nothing of their relationship at the time, but I was moved by their mutual elegance and sense of modernity.<br />It was not much later when I almost struck up a special thing with a student dancer but lost her when she transferred back home, left me, that is, with a hole in the heart. (A week or so after writing that line, I remembered something this aspiring dancer told me, something that might have had to do with her departure from the major she&rsquo;d been enrolled in. Her boobs were too big for success as a dancer, she said. College certainly can be a place of cruel revelation.)<br />A few years after that, a dancer and teacher I knew became as close as family among our small circle of friends, two of whom are no longer with us. She moved gracefully in the world. Her knees were unforgettable, even decades later &mdash; you should see the surgical scars!<br />Add to my dance memory&rsquo;s inventory the avant-garde films of (the Ukrainian choreographer) Maya Deren; the concerts of David Parsons, Pilobolus, Momix, Twyla Tharp and Alvin Ailey; the Kansas City work of Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Mary Pat Henry, Westport Ballet, Haley Kostas, Owen/Cox. You get the picture. I don&rsquo;t think it&rsquo;s an obsession. It&rsquo;s deep appreciation.<br />Dance connects. And often in unexpected ways. It&rsquo;s possible all this emotion was stirred by the fact that we were now seeing live performances again. Our inner circuits certainly have been hyper-sensitized by the last two years of isolation, caution and chaos.</font></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Latest from Owen/Cox an Easter Rachmaninoff surprise]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/latest-from-owencox-an-easter-rachmaninoff-surprise]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/latest-from-owencox-an-easter-rachmaninoff-surprise#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 10 May 2021 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/latest-from-owencox-an-easter-rachmaninoff-surprise</guid><description><![CDATA[AUTHOR:&nbsp;LAUREN WARNECKE&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;PUBLISHED DATE:&nbsp;MAY 10, 2021&nbsp;LATEST FROM OWEN/COX AN EASTER RACHMANINOFF SURPRISE&#8203;OVERLAND PARK, Kan. &mdash; I thought I knew Owen/Cox Dance Group. Turns out, a 10-minute dance film, released last month on Easter Sunday, changed my perception of this now-seasoned Kansas City-based ensemble.&nbsp;Call it an air of spontaneity, maybe, or perhaps a sense of reverent rebellion. Honestly, I can&rsquo;t quite put my finger on what&rsquo;s  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><span><span><a href="http://www.artintercepts.org/author/admin/"><span>AUTHOR:&nbsp;</span>LAUREN WARNECKE</a></span></span>&nbsp;&nbsp;<span>&nbsp;<br /><font color="#e05c5c"><span>PUBLISHED DATE:&nbsp;</span>MAY 10, 2021</font></span>&nbsp;<br /><span><a href="http://www.artintercepts.org/2021/05/10/latest-from-owen-cox-an-easter-rachmaninoff-surprise/#respond"><span>LATEST FROM OWEN/COX AN EASTER RACHMANINOFF SURPRISE<br />&#8203;</span></a></span><br /><font color="#2a2a2a">OVERLAND PARK, Kan. &mdash; I thought I knew Owen/Cox Dance Group. Turns out, a 10-minute dance film, released last month on Easter Sunday, changed my perception of this now-seasoned Kansas City-based ensemble.&nbsp;Call it an air of spontaneity, maybe, or perhaps a sense of reverent rebellion. Honestly, I can&rsquo;t quite put my finger on what&rsquo;s different about &ldquo;And the darkness has not overcome it,&rdquo; the latest in what Owen/Cox is calling &ldquo;an unconventional 14th season&rdquo; of all digital works.</font><br /><br /><font color="#2a2a2a">In a collaboration with&nbsp;Kansas City Chorale, &ldquo;And the darkness&rdquo; is danced to two movements from the Chorale&rsquo;s recording of Sergei Rachmaninoff&rsquo;s&nbsp;<span>All Night Vigil</span>. Co-founder Jennifer Owen, the company&rsquo;s main choreographer, is routinely drawn to multi-disciplinary collaborations with the city&rsquo;s various cultural institutions, and is heavily influenced by clean, classical lines&mdash;so much so, one could venture to call Owen/Cox a contemporary ballet company. Musically adventurous, thanks in large part to co-founder Brad Cox, a composer, Owen is unabashed in her affection for orchestral scores and jazz. (Her suite&nbsp;<a href="http://www.artintercepts.org/2018/05/29/2018-spring-to-dance-chock-full-of-pleasant-surprises/">set to Bach&rsquo;s&nbsp;<span>Brandenburg Concerto No. 3</span></a>, specifically, got a lot of play on the road.)</font><br /><br /><font color="#2a2a2a">Filmed onstage at the Carlsen Center at Johnson County Community College&mdash;which has become a wellspring for the greater Kansas City dance scene since launching its annual&nbsp;<a href="http://www.artintercepts.org/2017/06/09/kansas-city-new-dance-partners-puts-local-dance-front-and-center/">New Dance Partners</a>&nbsp;series in 2013&mdash;&rdquo;And the darkness has not overcome it&rdquo; overlays footage of three dancers performing solo. It was most likely a pragmatic decision to film Winston Dynamite Brown,&nbsp;Emily Mushinski and Laura Jones Wallner alone, maximizing safety during the pandemic, though it resonates here as a deliberate choice.</font><br /><br /><font color="#2a2a2a">Consider the subject. In the Catholic tradition, the Vigil is the liturgy held on the night before Easter. As one of the holiest nights of the year, it&rsquo;s also the time at which adults desiring to become part of the church are baptized and confirmed. Sergei Rachmaninoff&rsquo;s homage to the occasion,&nbsp;<span>All Night Vigil,&nbsp;</span>is sung a cappella. It&rsquo;s a work like no other in his catalog. I thought I knew Rachmaninoff until I first heard the&nbsp;<span>All Night Vigil</span>.</font><br /><br /><font color="#2a2a2a">Though Owen/Cox doesn&rsquo;t specially reference any kind of religiosity in the film, &ldquo;And the darkness&rdquo; has baptismal undertones. It opens with Brown, shirtless, bathed in purply white light (designed by Eric Morrow), alone onstage as he softly swipes his arms from side to side ahead of gorgeous, almost slow motion pirouettes and lunges. He&rsquo;s joined by the two women, not together onstage but as a triptych of side-by-side images in saturated blue light on the left, and red on the right. Squint, and it&rsquo;s the French flag. Mid-way through, the trio change from their dark, ruddy costumes into bright white, ushering in the morning and ending with arms overhead, gazing toward the heavens and basking in warm, amber light. It doesn&rsquo;t read as salvation, exactly&mdash;more like acceptance of our Earthly fates.</font><br /><br /><font color="#2a2a2a">Mushinski and Wallner (who could almost be twins) flank Brown for the majority of the film; they all dance at the same time, but not entirely together, by design. Each dancer catches a wave from solo parts in the bass and tenor sections, or echos the underlying hues of the altos, or flies with the airy, stratospheric sopranos. Through the magic of film (directed by Sean Burgman and edited by Alec Nichols), entrances and exits come in the form of boxes expanding and contracting across the width of my computer screen, or swapping one dancer for another, mid-air. But without instrumentation, the dance is quite liberated from strict attention to tempo or melody, pausing as the singers took a breath, sometimes, but feeling no sense of obligation toward this idea, pro forma. It feels a reverie, extricated by both time and space.<br />&#8203;</font><br /><font color="#2a2a2a">For this critic, that is the essence of faith. We walk through life with others, alongside them. Sometimes our paths cross. We find similarities. We sometimes move how they move. But in the quiet moments, it&rsquo;s just you and God, in whatever form He may take.</font></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Owen/Cox Dance Group: Morena]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/owencox-dance-group-morena]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/owencox-dance-group-morena#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 06 Nov 2018 06:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/owencox-dance-group-morena</guid><description><![CDATA[Owen/Cox Dance Group&nbsp;Johnson County Community College&nbsp;Polsky Theatre&nbsp;Overland Park, Kansas&nbsp;October 20, 2018&nbsp;MorenaSteve SucatoIn keeping with its mission statement &ldquo;to create new music and dance collaborations,&rdquo; Kansas City, Missouri-based Owen/Cox Dance Group&rsquo;s artistic director Jennifer Owen said in a curtain speech prior to the company&rsquo;s performance of Morena that when she attended Victoria Botero&rsquo;s music concert of the same name, she ins [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><font color="#2a2a2a">Owen/Cox Dance Group&nbsp;<br />Johnson County Community College&nbsp;Polsky Theatre&nbsp;<br />Overland Park, Kansas&nbsp;October 20, 2018&nbsp;<br />Morena<br /><br />Steve Sucato<br /><br />In keeping with its mission statement &ldquo;to create new music and dance collaborations,&rdquo; Kansas City, Missouri-based Owen/Cox Dance Group&rsquo;s artistic director Jennifer Owen said in a curtain speech prior to the company&rsquo;s performance of Morena that when she attended Victoria Botero&rsquo;s music concert of the same name, she instantly knew she had to make a dance work around it. The resulting music and dance program performed Saturday, October 20 at Johnson County Community College&rsquo;s Polsky Theatre proved a wonderful symbiotic collaboration that allowed each artistic element to shine<br /><br />Performed by OCDG&rsquo;s seven member troupe and an ensemble of folk instruments and voices led by soprano Botero, Morena was delivered in a series of vignettes set to songs curated by Botero that are traditionally sung by Jewish, Muslim and Christian women. The songs, sung in their native languages, told of betrayal, desire and the secret hopes of mothers which Owen interpreted in a mix of folk dance-infused modern/contemporary dance choreography. Broken up into three sections, the program began with a collection of Sephardic songs the lyrics of which Owen and her dancers didn&rsquo;t so much try to interpret as to capture the emotional content.<br />The section led off with the full ensemble in &ldquo;Scalerica de oro,&rdquo; a lively number that set the tone for the kind of high-armed, side-sweeping movement that would come to define the program&rsquo;s first half. &nbsp;The dancing had a communal feel with the performers holding hands in a circle and when a featured male/female pair broke off to perform a duet, encircling them.<br /><br />Next, dancing to the song &ldquo;Nani, nani&rdquo; (Lullaby, lullaby), dancers Megan Buckley, Demetrius McClendon and Marlayna Locklear presented a vignette where Buckley in spotlight on the opposite side of the stage to the others worriedly danced about and appeared to cradle an imaginary infant. Opposing that scene, McClendon and Locklear looked like two people in love. The pair clutched each other in tight embraces and moved through various partnered lifts that spoke of their desire for one another. As the vignette progressed and McClendon drew closer to Buckley, it became clear that there was&nbsp;a broken relationship between them and that Buckley was a woman in deep emotional turmoil over it. Her heartfelt, passionate dancing and that of the others was a highlight of the Sephardic section which overall lacked variety in both the music and in the choreography which tended to repeat itself.<br /><br />The Arabic section that came next included five songs from the 11th through 13th centuries. In it, the music and the dancing took on new tonal dimensions and interest. The second selection in it, &ldquo;Lama bada yatathanna,&rdquo; told in the song&rsquo;s lyrics of the joy a woman felt in seeing her love sway, his beauty amazing her. Owen&rsquo;s choreography for the group dance evoked a village festival feel with chain dances, twisting and turning movement and vibrant dances for the women and men as groups.<br /><br />While much of the choreography for the Arabic section contained movement used earlier in the program, Owen&rsquo;s choreography appeared to connect better with this music than that of the first section. Nowhere was that more evident than in &ldquo;Man li h&auml;&rsquo;im&rdquo; (He who loves me), a wonderfully-crafted and engaging duet danced by Buckley and partner Christopher Page-Sanders.<br /><br />The unmistakable highlight of the evening was Morena&rsquo;s closing Armenian section for which Botero and the Zulal Trio, an a cappella trio of Armenian-American women, developed a song cycle that began with a girl imploring her parents to marry her to a man for love and not money and ends with songs written after the 1915 Armenian genocide when the girl is now a widow and mother.<br /><br />Showcasing the singing of Botero and mezzo-soprano Kristee Haney, the section brought the marriage of music and dance to its peak beginning with the gleeful women&rsquo;s quartet &ldquo;Gago mare, garke zis&rdquo; (Father, Mother, Have Me Married). Dancers Locklear, Buckley, Terra Liu and Yazzmeen Laidler cavorted as if young women dreaming of love and marriage and celebrated the bond they held between each other as friends.<br /><br />The most moving and poignant moment in the program came in the extended solo &ldquo;Sareri hovin mernem&rdquo; (I Would Die for the Mountain Wind) performed by Laidler. Heartfelt and adroitly danced, Laidler seemed to pour everything she had into the solo that portrayed a woman seeking resilience in the face of a devastating loss. &nbsp;Owen&rsquo;s outstretched and often emotionally wrenching choreography and Laidler&rsquo;s performance of it were outstanding as was the ethereal singing of Botero and Haney.<br /><br />For the chameleon-like Owen/Cox Dance Group that works with a rotating cast of dancers and in varying movement styles depending on each project, Morena may have been a bit of an outlier in terms of past projects. Nonetheless, the production, despite its rather one note opening section, had a lot to offer in its blending of cultures, choreography and music and received a standing ovation from the audience at program&rsquo;s end.</font><br /></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Kansas City Opera Singer, Dancers Revive Century-Old Songs To Fight The Patriarchy]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/kansas-city-opera-singer-dancers-revive-century-old-songs-to-fight-the-patriarchy]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/kansas-city-opera-singer-dancers-revive-century-old-songs-to-fight-the-patriarchy#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 18 Oct 2018 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/kansas-city-opera-singer-dancers-revive-century-old-songs-to-fight-the-patriarchy</guid><description><![CDATA[Kansas City Opera Singer, Dancers Revive Century-Old Songs To Fight The PatriarchyBy LIBBY HANSSEN &bull; OCT 18, 2018Kansas City soprano Victoria Botero found music dating back to the 15th century in which women said things in song that they couldn't say in public..A new combination of ancient song and contemporary dance draws beauty from the hidden history of women.&ldquo;Morena&rdquo; is a Spanish word meaning &ldquo;beautiful dark woman.&rdquo; It is also the name of the latest project betwe [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><font color="#2a2a2a">Kansas City Opera Singer, Dancers Revive Century-Old Songs To Fight The Patriarchy<br /><br />By LIBBY HANSSEN &bull; OCT 18, 2018<br /><br />Kansas City soprano Victoria Botero found music dating back to the 15th century in which women said things in song that they couldn't say in public..<br /><br />A new combination of ancient song and contemporary dance draws beauty from the hidden history of women.<br />&ldquo;Morena&rdquo; is a Spanish word meaning &ldquo;beautiful dark woman.&rdquo; It is also the name of the latest project between Kansas City soprano and musicologist Victoria Botero, the Owen/Cox Dance Group, and a cadre of international musicians.<br /><br />Botero compiled secular songs from Jewish, Muslim and Christian traditions, dating from the 9th to 20th centuries, most of them from strict societies in which women, Botero says, &ldquo;had no agency.&rdquo;&nbsp;&ldquo;These were communities where women&rsquo;s voices were silent in their houses of worship and in the public sphere,&rdquo; she says.&nbsp;Within the musical sphere, though, &ldquo;women are allowed to sing things they may not be able to talk about. They can sing about desire. They can sing about in&#64257;delity.&rdquo;<br /><br />Botero &#64257;rst presented the program, for voice and instruments, at the 1900 Building in 2016. Choreographer Jennifer Owen, co-founder of Owen/Cox, thought the material would lend itself to dance.&nbsp;&ldquo;There are a lot of stories within the songs, so there&rsquo;s a natural narrative,&rdquo; Owen says. Her dancers won&rsquo;t be telling those stories literally, though. &ldquo;Because it&rsquo;s not spoken, dance can be more suggestive, more interpretive,&rdquo; she says.&nbsp;&ldquo;My goal for each of the songs is to try and present a mood and a story.&rdquo;<br /><br />Originally, Botero was interested in the music of the Sephardic diaspora, which spread throughout the world after Jews were expelled from Spain in the 15th century.&nbsp;She learned of an oral tradition passed from mother to daughter, when women would sing together as they prepared feasts for weddings and funerals, away from men.<br />Botero found an analogous tradition in an early Christian society, and wondered if there was a similar tradition in the Muslim world.<br />&#8203;<br />What she found, in fact, pre-dates the Sephardic songs. In a caliphate in Cordoba, the outmost reach of the Ottoman Empire in the 9th century, women developed a special repertory called Ring Songs, or Muwashshah.<br />&ldquo;A singer would take a poem in Arabic, but she would pick out one phrase and come back to it, what we now call the refrain,&rdquo; says Botero.</font></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Owen/Cox Dance Group with the People's Liberation Big Band at Polsky Theatre]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/owencox-dance-group-with-the-peoples-liberation-big-band-at-polsky-theatre]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/owencox-dance-group-with-the-peoples-liberation-big-band-at-polsky-theatre#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 23 Oct 2017 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/owencox-dance-group-with-the-peoples-liberation-big-band-at-polsky-theatre</guid><description><![CDATA[&#8203;Plastic SaxAn irreverent and opinionated guide to jazz in Kansas City.Monday, October 23, 2017Review: The Owen/Cox Dance Group with the People's Liberation Big Band at Polsky TheatreBrad Cox described the sculptures of Linda Lighton as &ldquo;a little bit provocative&rdquo; in his opening remarks at the second and &#64257;nal performance of &ldquo;In the Rompus Room&rdquo; at Polsky Theatre on Sunday. &nbsp;A similar sense of provocation infused the daring collaboration between the Owen/C [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><font color="#2a2a2a">&#8203;Plastic Sax<br /><br />An irreverent and opinionated guide to jazz in Kansas City.<br /><br />Monday, October 23, 2017<br /><br />Review: The Owen/Cox Dance Group with the People's Liberation Big Band at Polsky Theatre<br /><br />Brad Cox described the sculptures of Linda Lighton as &ldquo;a little bit provocative&rdquo; in his opening remarks at the second and &#64257;nal performance of &ldquo;In the Rompus Room&rdquo; at Polsky Theatre on Sunday. &nbsp;A similar sense of provocation infused the daring collaboration between the Owen/Cox Dance Group and the People&rsquo;s Liberation Big Band.<br /><br />The &#64257;rst half of the program played to the considerable strengths of both ensembles. Owen&rsquo;s choreography for seven athletic dancers echoed the lavish exuberance of a Busby Berkeley musical. &nbsp;Portions of the extended suite &ldquo;In the Rompus Room&rdquo; resembled the love child of an impassioned tryst between George Gershwin&rsquo;s&nbsp;<br />&ldquo;Rhapsody in Blue&rdquo; and the jazz standard &ldquo;Caravan.&rdquo;<br /><br />The People&rsquo;s Liberation Big Band expanded the possibilities of Kansas City&rsquo;s big band tradition with &ldquo;In the Rompus Room,&rdquo; but Cox&rsquo;s &ldquo;Letterbox&rdquo; was a comparatively delicate art-pop song cycle. &nbsp;While portions of the composition were worthy of Stephen Sondheim, the storyline was indecipherable. No matter.<br />&#8203;<br />The murkiness of the narrative was offset by inviting elements including the ravishing harmonies of vocalists Calvin Arsenia and Shay Estes and imaginative choreography that effectively conveyed jubilance, melancholy and desire. Enhanced by suggestive mood lighting and superb sound, the production was a beguiling union of music and dance.</font></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Out of the Darkness Comes Light]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/out-of-the-darkness-comes-light]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/out-of-the-darkness-comes-light#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Wed, 16 Aug 2017 17:45:55 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/out-of-the-darkness-comes-light</guid><description><![CDATA[BY DON DEGANAIS, KC MetropolisThe Kansas City Baroque Consortium&rsquo;s artistic director and cellist Trilla Ray-Carter explained before the concert that the theme, &ldquo;Between Silence and Light,&rdquo; came from the title of a book by architect Louis Kahn, who strove to achieve &ldquo;the meeting between the measurable and the unmeasurable,&rdquo; as he wrote. In that spirit, Carter programmed works ranging from the 17th&nbsp;Century dances of English composer Michael Praetorius to a world  [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><strong>BY DON DEGANAIS, <a href="http://kcmetropolis.org/issue/august-16-2017/article/out-of-the-darkness-comes-light" target="_blank">KC Metropolis<br /><br /></a></strong>The Kansas City Baroque Consortium&rsquo;s artistic director and cellist Trilla Ray-Carter explained before the concert that the theme, &ldquo;Between Silence and Light,&rdquo; came from the title of a book by architect Louis Kahn, who strove to achieve &ldquo;the meeting between the measurable and the unmeasurable,&rdquo; as he wrote. In that spirit, Carter programmed works ranging from the 17th&nbsp;Century dances of English composer Michael Praetorius to a world premiere of a new work by Liberty resident (but English-born) Ian Coleman.<br /><br />The Baroque Consortium opened the concert with three movements from the&nbsp;<em>Suite from Les Indes Galantes</em>&nbsp;of Jean-Phillipe Rameau, composed in 1735. During his period, French operas typically contained ballets, and this particular ballet is from an opera Rameau composed in recollection of a trip to North American tribes in the New World, as they journeyed to pay homage to King Louis XV. The sprightly music showed Rameau&rsquo;s usual French influence, but also displayed some surprising open-octave and open-fifth harmonies, the composer&rsquo;s apparent attempt to portray the exotic nature of Native Americans. It strikingly reminded this listener of Shaker music from New England, which became well-known a century later.<strong></strong><br /></div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph">Three dancers from the Owen/Cox Dance Group joined the Baroque Consortium for Georg Frideric Handel&rsquo;s&nbsp;<em>Passacaille&nbsp;</em>(Italian:&nbsp;<em>passacaglia</em>)from his&nbsp;<em>Trio Sonata</em>.&nbsp; Jennifer Owen&rsquo;s choreography was bright and cheery, as always, and brought a lively humor to this hodgepodge of ballet melodies.<br /><br />Harpsichordist Charles Metz mesmerized the audience with a brilliant solo performance of Handel&rsquo;s&nbsp;<em>Harpsichord Suite in E Major</em>, better known to most listeners as &ldquo;The Harmonious Blacksmith.&rdquo; His stylish rendition brought out the highlights in this melodic and jubilant work. Bringing emphasis and feeling to the solo harpsichord is difficult because of the instrument&rsquo;s inability to change volume, but Metz used tempo instead, drawing out certain phrases and dashing through others, to bring the maximum amount of color and contrast to the music. He was awarded with a long and appreciative ovation.<br /><br />The Owen/Cox dancers returned to the stage for the world premiere of Ian Coleman&rsquo;s work&nbsp;<em>Wild Dance of Flame</em>.&nbsp; As the composer explained prior to the performance, in writing this piece he expanded on a theme from a previous composition (done earlier this summer by the Kansas City Baroque Consortium), taking fire as his theme, and composing music inspired by the dancing of a flame. The resulting music starts with pizzicatos and short bursts of notes from the strings, followed by a cello solo nicely rendered by Ray-Carter, continuing with long drawn-out melody, and ending with a repetition of the pizzicattos and short bursts of the opening, concluding with a staccato chord at the end.<br /><br />The dancers from the Owen/Cox Company, Christine Ayers, Ivan Braatz and Cameron Thomas, gamboled, pranced, skipped and catered back and forth across the stage, nicely portraying in movement the waving, dipping and leaping of the imaginary flame. The choreography was an excellent marriage of movement to music, and as the composer said, revealed to him aspects of his composition of which he was unaware.<br /><br />The Baroque Consortium gave a pleasing rendition of a six-part dance suite from the opera&nbsp;<em>Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme</em>&nbsp;of the French master Jean-Baptiste Lully (1670), which featured a variety of different instrumental spotlights, including a violin-cello duet with concertmaster William Bauer and artistic director Ray-Carter, a cello-harpsichord duet with Ray-Carter and Metz, and an attractive solo by Mark Cohick (who usually played the recorder) on a wooden flute. The piece began and ended with a vigorous militaristic &ldquo;grand march&rdquo; which nicely bookended the instrumental interludes.<br /><br />For their concluding number, the Baroque Consortium and Owen/Cox dancers performed Michael Praetorius&rsquo;&nbsp;<em>Dances from Terpsichore</em>&nbsp;(1612), extracted from a large collection of dances the composer wrote. The music was cleanly performed with vigor and feeling, particularly the plaintive tune from the fourth movement (&ldquo;Spagnoletta&rdquo;), definitely the most familiar piece of music performed during the evening.<br /><br />For her dance choreography, Owens brought her performers out with a burst of athletic energy, as they performed at almost Olympian levels, leaping and racing back and forth across the stage. They took animated turns displaying some spectacular movements and amazing energy, and, joining together, took the piece to an animated conclusion which brought the crowd to its feet.<br /><br />Special mention should be made of costume designers Lisa Choules and Anastasia Rendina, and lighting designer Ashley Kok, all of whose work added much to the enjoyment of the evening.<br /><br />The performance was held in the Parish Hall of St. Paul&rsquo;s Episcopal Church at 40<span>th</span>&nbsp;and Main Streets. The renovated hall contains nice acoustics and a handy, if small, stage. This listener appreciated the friendly size and accommodations of the venue, a comment also made by other audience members. And the adjacent reception room proved handy for the post-concert reception where the artists could greet the performers. All in all, it is a delightful venue for this type of performance.<br /><span></span><br /><br /><strong>REVIEW:<br />Kansas City Baroque Consortium and Owen Cox Dance Group</strong><br /><strong><em>Between Silence and Light: Concert 3</em></strong><br />Friday, August 11, 2017<br />St. Paul&rsquo;s Episcopal Church<br />40<span>th</span>&nbsp;and Main Street, Kansas City, MO<br />For more information visit&nbsp;<a href="http://www.kcbaroque.org/" target="_blank">http://www.kcbaroque.org/</a>&nbsp;or&nbsp;<a href="http://www.owencoxdance.org/" target="_blank">http://www.owencoxdance.org/</a><br /><span></span></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Sympathetic Vibrations: Going Back in Mind]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/sympathetic-vibrations-going-back-in-mind]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/sympathetic-vibrations-going-back-in-mind#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 10 Aug 2017 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/sympathetic-vibrations-going-back-in-mind</guid><description><![CDATA[BY DAN CALDRON, Flatland KCWhen you think of chamber music composed hundreds of years ago, &ldquo;cutting edge&rdquo; is probably not the first phrase that comes to mind.Trilla Ray-Carter is hoping to change that.Ray-Carter is the executive and artistic director of the&nbsp;Kansas City Baroque Consortium, a group of local musicians dedicated to performing and educating the public about music that was part of an artistic style from the 1600 and mid-1700s. The style influenced every art form of it [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><strong>BY DAN CALDRON, <a href="http://C.na54.content.force.com" target="_blank">Flatland KC<br /><br /></a></strong>When you think of chamber music composed hundreds of years ago, &ldquo;cutting edge&rdquo; is probably not the first phrase that comes to mind.<br /><span></span>Trilla Ray-Carter is hoping to change that.<br /><br />Ray-Carter is the executive and artistic director of the&nbsp;<a href="http://www.kcbaroque.org/">Kansas City Baroque Consortium</a>, a group of local musicians dedicated to performing and educating the public about music that was part of an artistic style from the 1600 and mid-1700s. The style influenced every art form of its time.<br /><br /><span></span><strong></strong><br /></div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph">Ray-Carter founded the group in 2009 and established a non-profit last year with the aim of providing larger-scale events. The fruit of those efforts has been the consortium&rsquo;s&nbsp;<a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/between-silence-and-light-tickets-34191131595">2017 Summer Series: Between Silence &amp; Light</a>&nbsp;&ndash; a trio of performances exploring how the styles and ideas of the past inform the arts of today. The third and final concert of the series will take place tomorrow at&nbsp;<as+Episcopal+Church/@39.0540605,-94.5856644,15z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x0:0x1c816718b5a4f861!8m2!3d39.0540605!4d-94.5856644" href="https://www.google.com/maps/place/St+Paul's+Episcopal+Church/@39.0540605,-94.5856644,15z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x0:0x1c816718b5a4f861!8m2!3d39.0540605!4d-94.5856644">St. Paul&rsquo;s Episcopal Church</a>.<br /><span></span>The title is inspired by architect John Lobell&rsquo;s book, &ldquo;Between Silence and Light: Spirit in the Architecture of Louis I. Kahn,&rdquo; written about the 20th century architect who combined modernism with ancient elements.<br /><span></span>Ray-Carter was most intrigued by the &ldquo;between&rdquo; that bridges silence, which is immeasurable, and light, which is measurable. To her, the connectivity is the interplay between art forms.<br /><span></span>The first concert of the summer series, for example, explored music and architecture, featuring a discussion with Lobell. The second concert examined music, word and art through the career of Makoto Fujimura, an American-born writer. This week&rsquo;s performance will examine music and dance in a collaboration with local choreographer Jennifer Owen of the&nbsp;<a href="http://www.owencoxdance.org/">Owen/Cox Dance Group</a>.<br /><br />The series has meticulously woven together these contemporary arts with a backdrop of Baroque music, including three pieces commissioned from the head of the Music Department at William Jewell College, Ian David Coleman.<br /><span></span>Coleman joined the project after reading an excerpt from Lobell&rsquo;s book. His experience composing a piece for each concert and collaborating across disciplines speaks to the spirit of Kahn&rsquo;s philosophy.<br /><span></span>The process, Coleman said, confirmed his belief that the creative process is similar in many different art forms, including dance, painting, and architecture &mdash; extending even to the way a listener interprets a piece of music.<br /><span></span>These works from more contemporary artists, writers, and architects are clearly a necessary element of the series, but Ray-Carter&rsquo;s consortium plays an important role in tethering these practices to the past. And while most musicians could be forgiven for simply performing the music composed by the Baroque era&rsquo;s known figures alone, Ray-Carter has taken it a step further to ensure authenticity.<br /><span></span>Consortium musicians play instruments constructed the same way they were made during the Baroque period. In the same vein, instead of steel or polymer, the musicians use &ldquo;gut strings&rdquo; made from the walls of animal intestines. Touches like those produce music the way Handel or Bach would have heard it.<br /><span></span>&ldquo;What we&rsquo;ve found is that when we put the horse hair of the bow on the sheep gut, there is, if I can say it, a magical sound that you can&rsquo;t reproduce on a modern instrument,&rdquo; Ray-Carter said. &ldquo;There is a whole world of musical sound and shape that is revealed only when you go onto these ancient instruments.&rdquo;<br /><span></span>Ray-Carter and Coleman said the response to the series has been overwhelmingly positive, a result both attributed to the originality of the concept. Ray-Carter hopes to continue unpacking these ideas by making the series an annual event. And why shouldn&rsquo;t she? The performances in this series are not simply a collection of concerts but an invitation to audiences to explore ideas and reach across disciplines to find common ground, common understanding, and, perhaps, common origins in thought.<br /><span></span><em>&mdash; Dan Calderon is a Kansas City native, an attorney, and contributor to Flatland. You can contact him by emailing&nbsp;<a href="mailto:pdancalderon@gmail.com">pdancalderon@gmail.com</a>, or on Twitter @dansascity.</em><br /><span></span></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA["Production puts a lusty spin on a holiday favorite"]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/production-puts-a-lusty-spin-on-a-holiday-favorite]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/production-puts-a-lusty-spin-on-a-holiday-favorite#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 23 Jan 2017 17:04:28 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/production-puts-a-lusty-spin-on-a-holiday-favorite</guid><description><![CDATA[BY BILL BROWNLEE,&nbsp;The Star&nbsp;The production of &ldquo;The Nutcracker and the Mouse King&rdquo; by the Owen/Cox Dance Group and the People&rsquo;s Liberation Big Band of Greater Kansas City is less a heartwarming tale of Christmas than a lusty toy story. A few dozen occasionally fidgety children were among the audience of about 350 at the ensembles&rsquo; unconventional translation of the traditional seasonal ballet on Sunday afternoon at Polsky Theatre of the Carlsen Center at Johnson Co [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><font size="3"><strong>BY BILL BROWNLEE,&nbsp;</strong><em><a href="http://www.kansascity.com/entertainment/music-news-reviews/classical-music-dance/article120316158.html" target="_blank"><strong>The Star&nbsp;</strong></a></em><br /><br />The production of &ldquo;The Nutcracker and the Mouse King&rdquo; by the Owen/Cox Dance Group and the People&rsquo;s Liberation Big Band of Greater Kansas City is less a heartwarming tale of Christmas than a lusty toy story. A few dozen occasionally fidgety children were among the audience of about 350 at the ensembles&rsquo; unconventional translation of the traditional seasonal ballet on Sunday afternoon at Polsky Theatre of the Carlsen Center at Johnson County Community College.</font></div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph"><font size="3">Most adults in the audience were unflaggingly stimulated by the somewhat bawdy and consistently raucous interpretation of the two-act ballet loosely based on Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky&rsquo;s score and E.T.A. Hoffmann&rsquo;s libretto. In the midst of its 10th season, the Owen/Cox Dance Group is one of the region&rsquo;s leading contemporary dance troupes. The People&rsquo;s Liberation Big Band is a collective of more than 15 forward-thinking musicians. Sunday&rsquo;s show was the second and closing performance of their rendering of &ldquo;The Nutcracker&rdquo; in 2016. <br /><br />The madcap tone was established immediately as bandleader Brad Cox wielded a baton like a sword until the chaotic blare of the group coalesced into booming swing in the style of Charles Mingus. Soon after Jeff Harshbarger&rsquo;s compelling narration explained that a family was observing Christmas Eve, a pair of graceful celebrants left the stage to pursue their suggestively amorous inclinations in private. <br /><br />Jennifer Owen&rsquo;s imaginative choreography allowed Laura Hunt&rsquo;s portrayal of Marie to evolve from an innocent child into a young adult with an unlikely attraction to the Nutcracker. Darwin Black performed the latter role with slapstick agility and heroic athleticism.&nbsp; As the King of Mice, the experimental saxophonist Mark Southerland made a dramatic entrance from the back of the theater before battling with the Nutcracker. Dancers from the Paseo Academy of the Fine and Performing Arts &mdash; young performers who displayed a vigorous enthusiasm that could set a worthy example for experienced professionals &mdash; weaved around Southerland to create a menacing battalion of rodents.&nbsp; <br /><br />&#8203;The orchestra&rsquo;s arrangements differed from &ldquo;The Nutcracker&rdquo; variations associated with jazz ensembles led by Duke Ellington and Glenn Miller. They included a sultry selection that accompanied a playfully erotic burlesque dance, a provocative serenade in the vein of Miles Davis&rsquo; &ldquo;Sketches of Spain&rdquo; that set the mood for steamy gamboling and a progressive-rock interlude during which the Paseo Academy students bounced like teenyboppers.&nbsp; Marie once covered her ears in pained horror as the orchestra underscored a frightening scene with a dissonant passage. Adventurous theatergoers, however, savored every moment of the wondrous presentation.<br /><br />Bill Brownlee:&nbsp;<a href="https://twitter.com/happyinbag" target="_blank">@happyinbag</a></font></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Rhode Island NPR reviews Owen/Cox Dance Group]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/rhode-island-npr-reviews-owencox-dance-group]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/rhode-island-npr-reviews-owencox-dance-group#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 19 Jul 2016 12:27:17 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/rhode-island-npr-reviews-owencox-dance-group</guid><description><![CDATA[Bill Gale, Rhode Island NPRAfter a trip half-way around the world to Kazakhstan, Newport's Island Moving Company is home and holding it's annual Great Friends Dance Festival. Companies from New York to Kansas are on the bill. Bill Gale says it's worth seeing.Each year IMC invites a number of dance troupes to appear at the old and singular Quaker Meeting House in Newport. The visiting companies than bring IMC back to their home towns, all around &ndash; well, after Kazakhstan - the world.      Th [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;"><font color="#d5d5d5"><strong>Bill Gale, </strong><a target="_blank" href="http://ripr.org"><strong>Rhode Island NPR</strong></a><br /><br />After a trip half-way around the world to Kazakhstan, Newport's Island Moving Company is home and holding it's annual Great Friends Dance Festival. Companies from New York to Kansas are on the bill. Bill Gale says it's worth seeing.<br /><br />Each year IMC invites a number of dance troupes to appear at the old and singular Quaker Meeting House in Newport. The visiting companies than bring IMC back to their home towns, all around &ndash; well, after Kazakhstan - the world.</font><br /></div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;"><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">This year the primary company invited is the Owen/Cox Dance Group from Kansas City. They turn out to be a first-rate choice, an innovative company filled with energy and drive, fine dancing, and careful performing.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">Their premier piece was the closer last weekend &ldquo;Fuga Tanguera,.&rdquo; It's a work derived from Argentine tango and contemporary jazz.&nbsp; With Latino-implied music by Brad Cox, one of the company's founders, three men and three women take to the fully covered stage with easy drive. They seem to be entirely free even as they follow the choreography by Jennifer Owen.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">A quicksilver duet is done with crisp, clear feeling. The couple hold your attention completely. Then they travel quickly, fluidly back into the six-member cast.&nbsp; The change seems inevitable.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">&nbsp;The dance is filled with these magical moments, intricate and bold, at once.</span><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">With its unforced&nbsp; effort, it's decisive drive, and clear love of movement,&ldquo;Fuga Tanguera&rdquo; is worth the price of admission alone.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">Owen/Cox offered another piece. &ldquo;Canned Heat&rdquo; had two women and one man in fluffy T-shirts and brown shorts remaining closely together. They covered the stage carefully, being a group more often than singular dancers. The movement was proper, quick and all of a piece. I kept wondering when &ldquo;Canned Heat&rdquo; would surprise us with heat or at least more originality, or perhaps, humor.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">It didn't though, continuing to be a well made dance, well done. But lacking, perhaps, in individuality.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">Still, Owen/Cox is a company worth seeing. They'll be dancing each night this week at the Great Friends Festival.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">IMC contributed several pieces. The first was choreographer Shane Farrell's &ldquo;Queens Are Made of Distance and Greasepaint,&rdquo; a title that escapes any reality, I imagine. But the women dancing gave their all going from classical ballet to increasingly street-like movement.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">In the end &ldquo;Queens etc.&rdquo; gave me the feeling of a requiem. At the finale, the five women were all together but seemed, somehow, to be apart. The sense was a lack of happiness.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">Several New York area companies were on the bill last week. The standout, for me, was &ldquo;La Douceur de Carmen&rdquo; by Ballet des Ameriques School and Company. Again it was all women, three this time. In billowing, colorful ankle length dresses, they seemed, once again, females expressing themselves in swirly Spanish-like movement. It was pure enjoyment.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">This year's Great Friends Festival&nbsp; continues through Saturday with IMC and Owen/Cox being on each night accompanied by a new set of New York area companies.&nbsp; Its all definitely worth a trip to the City by the Sea.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(213, 213, 213)">Great Friend Dance Festival continues in Newport through Saturday. Bill Gale reviews the performing arts for Rhode Island Public Radio.</span></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[See 25 dance troupes on 2 stages this weekend]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/see-25-dance-troupes-on-2-stages-this-weekend]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/see-25-dance-troupes-on-2-stages-this-weekend#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 26 May 2016 18:22:22 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.owencoxdance.org/articles-and-reviews/see-25-dance-troupes-on-2-stages-this-weekend</guid><description><![CDATA[By Calvin Wilson,&nbsp;St. Louis Post-DispatchDance is perhaps the most breathtaking of the lively arts. For those who appreciate the art form, its very wordlessness is a blessing in an increasingly noisy world.&#8203;But for some folks, dance is a perplexing puzzle. That&rsquo;s understandable: The movement in modern dance and ballet can be at once exhilarating and indecipherable. But true dance fans would argue that not everything has to be spelled out &mdash; especially if it&rsquo;s spellbin [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;"><span><strong>By Calvin Wilson,&nbsp;</strong><a target="_blank" href="http://www.stltoday.com/entertainment/arts-and-theatre/see-dance-troupes-on-stages-this-weekend/article_a8df7277-fd60-5d8a-a7a8-36f6235e9549.html"><strong>St. Louis Post-Dispatch</strong></a></span><br /><br /><em>D</em>ance is perhaps the most breathtaking of the lively arts. For those who appreciate the art form, its very wordlessness is a blessing in an increasingly noisy world.<br />&#8203;<br />But for some folks, dance is a perplexing puzzle. That&rsquo;s understandable: The movement in modern dance and ballet can be at once exhilarating and indecipherable. But true dance fans would argue that not everything has to be spelled out &mdash; especially if it&rsquo;s spellbinding.</div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph" style="text-align:left;"><br /><span>Bringing a wider audience to serious dance is the mission of the Spring to Dance Festival, which debuted in 2008 and has become a St. Louis Memorial Day weekend tradition. On Friday, the event returns to the Blanche M. Touhill Performing Arts Center, with more than 25 local and national ensembles performing on two stages over three evenings.</span><br /><br />With its ninth edition, the fest continues to present both old favorites and new faces, says Michael Uthoff, artistic director of Dance St. Louis. One of the keys to its success, he says, is its timing.<br />&ldquo;I think the Memorial Day weekend works,&rdquo; Uthoff says. &ldquo;There is competition, yes, but there are also a lot of people who want to see different things &mdash; and we provide something different.&rdquo;<br />The festival has fulfilled his goal of securing a higher profile for dance in St. Louis, he says: &ldquo;The whole dance scene looks a lot stronger than it did 10 years ago.&rdquo;<br /><br />Until recently, Uthoff was also executive director of Dance St. Louis but has retired from that position. He says the future of his involvement with the festival and the New Dance Horizons program that showcases local companies is under discussion.<br /><br />The festival &ldquo;requires a great deal of knowledge in dance to make it work,&rdquo; Uthoff says.<br />Here are three performances worth checking out.<br /><br /><br /><strong><font size="5">Owen/Cox Dance Group</font></strong><br /><br />Originally conceived as a showcase for collaborations between choreographer Jennifer Owen and her husband, composer Brad Cox, the Kansas City ensemble Owen/Cox Dance Group has in recent years expanded its scope. Last year, on a program at Johnson County Community College, the company performed a work by nationally known choreographer Kate Skarpetowska.<br />Owen/Cox Dance Group will reprise that piece, called &ldquo;La Locura,&rdquo; at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Anheuser-Busch Performance Hall.<br /><br />&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a beautiful piece for five dancers,&rdquo; Owen says. &ldquo;The music is Spanish baroque, performed by Jordi Savall and his ensemble. It&rsquo;s recorded music, but it&rsquo;s absolutely gorgeous. And the dancing reflects the gorgeousness.&rdquo;<br /><br />The mood of &ldquo;La Locura,&rdquo; she says, is &ldquo;somber but also uplifting and hopeful&rdquo; as it deals with &ldquo;human relationships and how people interact.&rdquo;&nbsp;Skarpetowska will be familiar to St. Louis dance fans from her piece &ldquo;A Mariner,&rdquo; which the Big Muddy Dance Company performed in the New Dance Horizons program at the Touhill in 2014. With &ldquo;La Locura,&rdquo; Owen says, the choreographer &ldquo;really does a beautiful job with patterns &mdash; bodies intertwining and linking. It&rsquo;s really quite stunning to see.&rdquo;&nbsp;Owen/Cox Dance Group will begin its 10th season in the fall.<br /><br />&ldquo;As we grew, we started reaching out to other music ensembles,&rdquo; Owen says. &ldquo;So the collaborations became broader. But our mission has stayed the same: to present original dance and music.&rdquo;<br />Owen continues to dance with the company, &ldquo;but not in all of the performances, particularly when I&rsquo;m choreographing. And I&rsquo;m not performing in Kate&rsquo;s piece.<br />&#8203;<br />&ldquo;When I&rsquo;m choreographing,&rdquo; Owen says, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve discovered that if I can step back and see the picture without my being in it, the work is much stronger.&rdquo;<br /><br />&#8203;<a href="http://www.stltoday.com/entertainment/arts-and-theatre/see-dance-troupes-on-stages-this-weekend/article_a8df7277-fd60-5d8a-a7a8-36f6235e9549.html" target="_blank">To read the full article, click here.</a><br /><br /><br /></div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>