- Joined
- Oct 26, 2016
I wrote a little bit about P/C here and why I appreciate them in a separate thread: https://www.goldenskate.com/forum/s...gure-Skating-Free-Dance&p=1991785#post1991785. I thought some fans here might be interested in my perspective on their FD. I don't want to bash any skaters in a fan thread, so here is the edited portion of what I wrote (I just linked the whole comment for context if someone wants it).
P/C's choreography, however, heightens and complicates our understanding of the piece. To give an example, a feature of Moonlight Sonata is an ostinato triplet and it’s first movement is a dark, heavy, burdened piece of music. Many have described this pattern as a swaying feeling (which is why sometimes people imagine a boat on a lake swaying over moonlight). But P/C do something different with it. They imagine instead we are moving forward propulsively, not swaying, as they enter the curve lift during the first movement and gazing longingly upward as the pitch heightens. It’s a bold interpretation. It’s foreshadowing the possibility of the third movement - a motion propelling us to the resolution of burden to one of excitement and possibility. It’s a completely different way of viewing the first movement than we are accustomed to.
Edit: I might do a similar analysis of their entire dance and post it here, since I find it such an intricate, compelling work - but that's a bit of work and only if fans would appreciate such a thing. If no one wants to hear my blathering it's all good
P/C's choreography, however, heightens and complicates our understanding of the piece. To give an example, a feature of Moonlight Sonata is an ostinato triplet and it’s first movement is a dark, heavy, burdened piece of music. Many have described this pattern as a swaying feeling (which is why sometimes people imagine a boat on a lake swaying over moonlight). But P/C do something different with it. They imagine instead we are moving forward propulsively, not swaying, as they enter the curve lift during the first movement and gazing longingly upward as the pitch heightens. It’s a bold interpretation. It’s foreshadowing the possibility of the third movement - a motion propelling us to the resolution of burden to one of excitement and possibility. It’s a completely different way of viewing the first movement than we are accustomed to.
Edit: I might do a similar analysis of their entire dance and post it here, since I find it such an intricate, compelling work - but that's a bit of work and only if fans would appreciate such a thing. If no one wants to hear my blathering it's all good







That is okay though.