Song
By Ranters Theatre
Concept/Director
- Adriano Cortese Visual Concept/Designer Laura Lima, Songwriter/Performer
- James Tyson,
Image
Production and Lighting Design - Stephen Hennessy, Sound Designer -
David Franzke, Perfumer
- George Kara, Performers - Paul Lum and Patrick Moffatt, Text
- Raimondo Cortese, Producer - Sara Austin, Adriano Cortese,
Production
Management - Geordie Baker
& Govin Ruben from Rubix Cube
Arts House – North Melbourne
12 April – 21 April
This ‘sense around’
experience can be enjoyed against the wall, on a stool, or, on your own piece
of astroturf placed anywhere on the beautifully polished Town Hall floor. It is a very individual experience that
doubtless many participants have reveled or will revel in, in the next few days.
It is so often what frame of mind
one brings to theatre, that colours the experience, and can enhance with
piquancy and assist in the suspension disbelief. Exhausted at the end of a long week I was
looking forward to something immersive and magical. And, initially, I responded to Song with as much generosity as I could
muster to find myself strangely transported to my sometime, misspent youth –
imbuing me with the feeling of being totally stoned and lying heavily on the
grass with a heightened awareness to my natural surroundings.
A solid and interesting
starting point I thought. But sadly not
a place I was able to freely maneuver from with the limited resources at my
disposal.
Song is an
intense experience that makes weighty demands on its audience as it separates
out the senses. What one has most to
work with is sound (David Franzke), sounds from nature as well as songs simply
sung with a guitar and then piano (James Tyson). There are also smells (Perfumer – George
Kara) and air movement and a large round white object and some falling
water. Although initial smells are
light and pleasant they are almost all somehow synthetic, and, except perhaps
in the early stages, do not necessarily relate to the sounds.
Overall there is little to
look at, other than other audience members.
To start with this is unmediated and not particularly comfortable though
as the event moves on lighting (Stephen Hennessy) states change. I was expecting projected images. In a world that is so dominated and informed
by the image it feels strange to do without them. And for me the strongest messages from Song are just how dependent I have
become on visual stimuli and how discomforting and disconcerting it can be to
separate out and isolate ones own senses.
A worthwhile adventure in
theatre making and interesting journey as participant but it did seem to give me a headache.
Suzanne Sandow
(For Stage Whispers)
(For Stage Whispers)
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