Rhapsody in Blue
Rhapsody in Blue Trailer from JDA Media on Vimeo.
In 1923, bandleader Paul Whiteman wanted to turn the American dance band into something a bit more prestigious or, as Paul Osgood the author of 1926's ‘So This is Jazz’ put it, make "an honest woman out of jazz." So Whiteman invited Gershwin to perform at his ‘Experiment in Modern Music’ show, and his concerto became the star of the evening.
Gershwin conceived the concerto while on a train to Boston. At the beginning of 1924 he said,
"I had already done some work on the rhapsody. It was on the train, with its steely rhythms, its rattle-ty bang that is often so stimulating for a composer."
And so, this duet brings these two ideas together. We see a man as he sits on a train, tapping his feet to the irresistable rhythm of the jazz in his soul, but restricted by convention...that is, until he is joined by the Lady of Jazz.
Choreography: Paul Chantry & Rae Piper.
Lighting: Owain Davies
Gershwin conceived the concerto while on a train to Boston. At the beginning of 1924 he said,
"I had already done some work on the rhapsody. It was on the train, with its steely rhythms, its rattle-ty bang that is often so stimulating for a composer."
And so, this duet brings these two ideas together. We see a man as he sits on a train, tapping his feet to the irresistable rhythm of the jazz in his soul, but restricted by convention...that is, until he is joined by the Lady of Jazz.
Choreography: Paul Chantry & Rae Piper.
Lighting: Owain Davies