DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Review: When Club Dance Bumps Into Latin Jazz

December 4, 2025
in News
Review: When Club Dance Bumps Into Latin Jazz

Two dancers sit in silence on boxes. One leans onto the other, then they switch roles. After a few exchanges like this, they bump each other — a move humorously accentuated by the pluck of a bassist who has suddenly appeared onstage. The bassist (Eduardo Belo) brings the lifeblood of music to their dance and also joins it, at one point walking under a bridge made by the dancers’ arms.

This is the start of “Shadow Cities,” a work that Ephrat Asherie Dance is debuting at the Joyce Theater this week. It encapsulates much of the hour that follows. Theatricalized club and street dance by Asherie’s adept group meets live music by the eminent Afro-Latin jazz pianist and composer Arturo O’Farrill. The result is … cute.

Asherie is a B-girl who came up in New York’s underground club scene and for years has been honoring that culture while adapting it to theatrical contexts. She often uses live jazz, sometimes by her pianist brother, Ehud. O’Farrill is the rare top-shelf jazz musician to collaborate consistently with dancers. He’s familiar to Joyce audiences for his work with the tap dancer Ayodele Casel.

A collaboration between these two artists sounded promising, but the show is patchy. A program note describes “Shadow Cities” as a “reflection on the beauty, vastness and joy of the in-between,” and the work does achieve moments of beauty and joy. But it’s also in-between in a more frustrating sense: without the improvisational heat of the club and without the structural clarity and sustained imaginative power possible with choreography.

In the best section, Asherie and three other female dancers take the stage in silence. They begin a simple stepping pattern, with slow, swinging arms. Their footsteps have a muted sound, a hush that combines with the swinging motion for a lulling, lullaby effect. When O’Farrill adds his piano and Larry Bustamante his flute, they accelerate the Latin sidestepping without losing the sweetness.

The quality is soon lost, though, in the choreography’s loose weave. Too much of it is organized like a street party. “Shadow Cities” is the kind of show in which the musicians move among the dancers and the dancers play cowbells and shakers; even the boxes turn out to be drumlike cajons. Whenever the music locks into a groove, be it Afro-Cuban or funky, the dance does, too, pleasurably. But in between these bits, it’s diffuse.

Thematically, it’s vague: shadows and silhouettes in the lighting, boxes as suitcases, hands-up gestures. Perhaps it was the letterman stripes and Charlie Brown yellow in David Dalrymple’s costumes or an occasional Vince Guaraldi feel in O’Farrill’s music, but the show put me in mind of a Peanuts holiday special.

Some of that feeling emanates from Asherie, who, along with being a supple and musically sensitive dancer, is a performer who unfailingly radiates niceness. She and the six other dancers shine in spots — Manon Bal mixing florid arm motions from waacking with salsa footwork; Val Ho perfectly combining floppiness with sharp punctation in her locking.

O’Farrill is on another level, though. A muscular pianist, he doesn’t just cover the whole keyboard; he handles the strings under the lid. When he takes the music into avant-garde areas, Asherie’s choreography struggles to follow. O’Farrill’s solo interludes are the highlights of “Shadow Cities,” and it is both a cop-out and a gift that the show ends with him, making John Coltrane’s “Naima” his own. Nothing in-between about that. It’s just great.

Ephrat Asherie Dance

Through Sunday at the Joyce Theater, Manhattan; joyce.org.

The post Review: When Club Dance Bumps Into Latin Jazz appeared first on New York Times.

White shoe law firm Fried Frank quashes rumors that it’s slashing hires because of AI bots
News

White shoe law firm Fried Frank quashes rumors that it’s slashing hires because of AI bots

by New York Post
March 13, 2026

Bosses at one white-shoe law firm in New York are stating unequivocally that chatbots won’t be a job killer, maybe ...

Read more
News

FBI Investigating Steam Games for Malware – Players Asked to Check Their Libraries

March 13, 2026
News

I tried meatloaf recipes from Ina Garten, Ree Drummond, and Rachael Ray, and the best one beat the Barefoot Contessa’s

March 13, 2026
News

One stress-loving composer, 125 nominees: What it takes to score the Oscars

March 13, 2026
News

What to Do if You’re a Data Breach Victim (and You Probably Are)

March 13, 2026
Meet the executive behind AT&T’s $250 billion bid to become essential AI infrastructure

Meet the executive behind AT&T’s $250 billion bid to become essential AI infrastructure

March 13, 2026
These States Don’t Want You to See the Cruelty of Their Executions

The Death Penalty Is Even More Horrifying Than You Think

March 13, 2026
America’s 5 Most Well-Endowed States, Ranked

America’s 5 Most Well-Endowed States, Ranked

March 13, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026