Mark Morris
For choreographer Mark Morris, it all starts with the music. He creates a dance when a piece of music inspires him. If the music makes him visualize movement phrases, he decides to make a dance to it.
Morris thinks of himself as “a musician in the form of a choreographer” and often works with the musical score in his hand. When there is a solo instrument in the score, he matches that with a solo dancer. When there are parts for many instruments, he uses his ensemble of dancers. The music is like a map that he embodies through movement.
Morris likes to choreograph to classical music because the structure is often very clear. His well-known work, L’Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato, is choreographed to an ode by George Frederick Handel. Morris insists on live musicians when he performs, and this work has four solo singers, a choir, and 24 dancers.
Morris responds to the melody (the tune you hum or sing when listening to music), harmony (the sound that occurs when several different notes are played or sung at the same time), counterpoint (the combination of two or more melodic parts so that they support one another, yet remain independent), dynamics (the overall loudness or softness of the music), and rhythm (strong and weak beats played in a repeating pattern) in his choreography, as well as the mood. L’Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato has different moods indicated in the title (happy, pensive/thoughtful, moderate), which Morris matches through his movement. Dancers weave between each other at fast speeds at times and spin in large exuberant circles, but the work also contains moments of stillness and silence.
Choreographers can risk being too controlled by the music, but Morris is successful because his choreography is inventive, full of humor, and visually complex.