Fla.co.men with Israel Galvan.
Direction, choreography and dance. Israel Galvan. Musicians David Lagos, Antonio Moreno, Tomas de Perrate, Juan M. Jimenez, Eloise Canton, Caracafe (Emilio Fernandez de los Santos. Her Majesty’s Theatre. Adelaide Festival. March 9-11
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Israel Galvan in Fla.co.men Photo by Luis Castilla |
Flamenco fires Israel Galvan’s soul. It courses through his body like an electric current of sparking energy. His feet ricochet with the earth as his arms slice through the air with hands flicking and fluttering and raising the spirit of his dance to the sky. Each gesture is a musical note. Each driving rhythm of the feet stamps the earth with astounding agility and athleticism.
There is grace in the eloquence
of his dance, comedy in the self-mocking surprise, and the unmistakable macho
arrogance of his technical mastery. His body segments, arms flailing the air,
feet forging the staccato beating of the ground. He enters in an apron, warming
up like a conductor with his orchestra before rousing his instrument, his body,
to an astonishing display of passion and technique. Like a jazz musician,
Galvan creates his own distinct interpretation of a tradition passed down
through the centuries and embedded in the spirit of the Spanish people.
Galvan’s Flamenco is the dance of
the streets of Seville, the caves of Granada and the fields of Andalucia. It is
the dance of Duende, the longing and the purging of the struggle that one finds
in the poetry of Lorca. It is the song
of rebellion, the song of love and desire and the song of defiance. Galvan’s
flamenco surprises and shocks. His gestures break free from tradition and his
hands beat out the rhythm upon his bare abdomen or his feet pound an
accompaniment upon the pedals of the bass drum. Suddenly at one point he whirls
into a pirouette or continues the percussive beat along the auditorium walls.
And then, in an instant, there is stillness, a silence that fills the theatre
with the air of expectation.
Gradually the musicians enter,
Firstly there is Eloisa Canton, the violinist, and the only female in the group.
Then the drummer on the timpanies and kettle drum. And then the saxophonist and
the guitarist, join the two singers. The
wail of duende on the wind rings through the theatre as the guitar strums the
spirit of the flamenco. Galvan begins to clap the hands and the palmas carries
through the group, rhythmic and enticing. It is the music of the corrida and
the guitarist, Caracafe, accompanies his own pasa doble.
Music, song and dance fuse in a
celebration of life, its pain, its joy and its defiant struggle. They arise
from deep within the soul, a cry from the heart that even from the proscenium
arch sweeps across a mesmerized audience, caught up in the fervent longing of
the strident song and the sheer mastery of Galvan’s control and liberation. He
is free of traditional constraint, an unique exponent of the duende of the
dance.
At one point, the stage is
silhouetted in tableau by the amber backlight. The dark outlines of figures on
the stage stand motionless for a long while, transfixed, beautiful and suspended
in time. And then the deep throated song cuts the air, the musicians join in
and Galvan leads his troupe towards their final flourish– in a dress. We are
never allowed to take the iconic dance of his people too seriously and are
constantly reminded that dance is the liberation of spirit, the celebration of
life and the conquest of struggle.
The audience leaps to its feet in
ovation. Transported and thrilled, their idea of flamenco for those who may
recall the fiery spectacles of Luisillo has been transformed by a master of the
dance and his company of musicians and singers. It has been an evening that they will never
forget.