Methologies III: Interpreting Performance

 

Interpreting Performance

 

Last night, urged by the promise of an academic grade and a chance to practice real-time ethnographic research, I attended the Williams’ Campaign Ultra Lounge event. Held in the hub of student life, there in Paresky Center a mixture of students, professors, alumni and their children gathered for free food, gifts, and a host of other side attractions with the main one being the Williams College Jazz Band… or at least that was my perception.

 

I arrived at the event around 7:40 PM, wanting to get a chance to set up, take in my surroundings, and to eat since the event was slated to start at 8:30. I walked into Paresky Center entering Baxter Hall expecting the dimmed lights, hors-d’oeuvres, and décor suitable for an evening event, as the poster advertised.

unnamed

Instead I walked into a perfunctory mish-mash of haphazard signs, some misspelled, luxurious appetizer tables, scantily decorated standing tables, and a solitary stage dotted with instruments and three purple columns too add some sense of flair (that admittedly it didn’t do much) to the setup. As the outdoor activities drew to a close, numerous bodies poured inside the center searching for warmth. The confused and excited crowd seemed more concerned with the heady spread of fall themed ‘deserts’ than the impending performance.

 

Anxious to begin our observation and participate in the night’s festivities that included a photo booth and caricature drawings, my classmates and I decided to staunch the pain of the wait with apple crumble in a cup, hot cider, chicken wings, and random note taking. This bought us maybe 15 minutes until we noticed it was 8:36 and not a movement was made toward the stage. The lights were on at full power and errant conversations about celebrities and people exchanging pleasantries surrounded me. Hurried students tried to hunt down the source of the ‘free gift’ (a portable phone charger adorned with the Campaign motto: “Teach It Forward”) a lucky 250 people would get for attending the event. The occasional parent-child duo milled around unsure of the ‘next big surprise’ the Campaign had in store for them.

 

Everything about this atmosphere read as if people could care less about the band and it’s apparent tardiness except for my classmates and I. So what did we do? Took more notes. The ferocity of our note taking interested many the passer by. “What are you guys writing? Is that, like, homework?” “What’s this little writing circle you guys have going on?” And the plain, almost aggressive “What is that?” were the questions our peers and alumni had for us. At first I responded saying that this “was a part of our Africana studies senior seminar class, and [that] we’re currently studying performance ethnography. We’re supposed to be taking notes on the jazz performance.” And with that people either joked about their apparent absence or left us alone, satisfied with the answer; but as the night wore on I got lazier and lazier and wound up saying, “Yeah this is homework for class” with a what-can-you-do face. In hindsight stationing ourselves in the back of the hall at standing table in the center wasn’t the brightest idea. We made a quasi-spectacle of ourselves in the absence of the band.

 

After these visits we realized this on some level and stopped taking notes. Partially tired of writing and tired of waiting, we took a break. My two classmates and I turned to the childhood game of *M*A*S*H*, to pass the time. It would be an understatement to say that this wait hardly put us in the mood to watch a performance. Even the crowd grew weary of waiting and petered out to a mere 70 some odd people still floating around. Fast-forward a whopping 30 minutes later, members of the band saunter onto stage and eek out a couple notes. I shook my head in disbelief at my cellphone screen that read 9:50 PM. The band seemed just as tired as I felt. Their movements oozed nonchalance as they slowly tested out the sound of their instruments. A blare of a horn here, a lazy sax note there, and timid keying of a piano made up the first sounds of the Williams Jazz Ensemble. Eventually they found it in themselves to play “Play That Funky Music”.

 

Being the first number of the show, the performance was still getting its legs. The musicians peered over at each other trying to match nonverbal cues with the rise and falls of the song. After a time the band seemed to ‘gel’ with one another. The base and the drums created an infallible foundation on which the horns, the saxophone, and the piano keys not only stood but also weaved in and out of one another. The band seemed to actually like what they were playing. For a moment it didn’t seem obvious to the meager audience that they were contractually obligated to be here.

 

However the true magic happened when another student provided vocals to the instrumental. At first it was unclear as to if he was a part of the ensemble. He sat down on the edge of the stage for about 20 minutes of the performance, and all the sudden he started vocalizing. Low and timid at first the voice seemed lost in the muddle of music, but as the song progressed so did the voice. With a bowed head and singular concentration the vocalist made his words stronger, clearer, filled with intent. It seemed as though the others felt this intention; the saxophone player especially. He not only swayed fervently to the singer’s words but he replied to them. The rest of the band lived within the pocket of music the two created. Though the crowd had dwindled to nil, the band played their best number. Two spectators even got up to dance to the smooth sound. In that juicy moment what happened could be described by Dwight Conquergood’s principal of dialogical performance:

This performative stance struggles to bring together different voices, world

views, value systems, and beliefs so that hey can have a conversation with

one another. The aim of dialogical performance is to bring the self and the

other so that they can question, debate, and challenge one another (Conquergood, 9).

The musicians heard each other’s ideas and expounded on them, responded. The people in the crowd saw this exchange of ideas and internalized them into their bodies. Though these ideas I am speaking of are purely abstract it doesn’t change the act of dialogue. Live music and dance is always a conversation, whether it is one-sided is up to the performers themselves. In this moment such an exchange was present. In this moment this was a good performance. However that crumbled quickly.

 

After becoming hyper aware of the fact they were playing to a mostly empty room, the musicians let the atmosphere die. They let this dialogue “dissolve [back] into the performer”, killing the beauty they had just created. They once again sounded as if they were in someone’s garage practicing for the hell of it, but not in a good way. The band seemed detached from the room, enveloped in themselves no longer reaching out for some sort of interaction with their intimate audience.

 

All this is to say that this was a lukewarm performance with little shining moments. Aside from two numbers, the jazz band seemed uninterested in their material and the space. The novelty of a heartfelt vocalist gave the performance the wings it needed, but just as quickly they came they left. The Williams Jazz Ensemble lacked connection, which made this event a venture I kind of regretted attending.

Tags: ,

9,448 Responses to “Methologies III: Interpreting Performance”

  1. 토토가족방

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  2. 바카라사이트

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  3. 아가씨 구직

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  4. 해외바카라사이트 도메인

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  5. 실시간바카라사이트 추천

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  6. 카지노드라마

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  7. 카지노 크랩스

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  8. 안전놀이터 먹튀검증

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  9. 온라인바카라순위

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  10. 네임드파워사다리

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  11. 우리카지노 샌즈 주소

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  12. 스웨디시 테라피

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  13. 우리카지노 샌즈 쿠폰

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  14. 경남 스웨디시

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  15. 서울 스웨디시

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  16. 실시간스피드키노 픽

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  17. 스웨디시 할인쿠폰

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  18. 라이브카지노주소

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  19. 안전카지노 검증

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  20. 안전사이트 도메인

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  21. click through the following article

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  22. 24시 대출 says:

    24시 대출

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  23. go to this website

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  24. 무방문대출

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  25. Wow, amazing block structure! The overview of your website is pretty good .

  26. 토토사이트먹튀검증

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  27. 스포츠토토사이트

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  28. 스포츠토토 사이트 추천

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  29. please click the up coming post

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  30. nice blog i like it and thanks for sharing I was looking for it for a long time. So glad to find it here.. Escort Service Versova

  31. 스웨디시 선불

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  32. 란제리 알바

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  33. 란제리알바

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  34. 퀸알바 says:

    퀸알바

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  35. 마사지 알바

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  36. 비제이 알바

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  37. This is an excellent post and for sharing useful information.

  38. Thanks for sharing such great information. It was really helpful to me.

  39. 파워볼게임 픽

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  40. 스웨디시 아로마

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  41. 동행스피드키노

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  42. 테라피 스웨디시

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  43. 스웨디시 소

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  44. mouse click the up coming post

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  45. 로미로미 스웨디시

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  46. 스웨디시 최저가

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

  47. 울산 스웨디시

    like water for chocolate » Assignments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.