Original BW music and dance project shines 'One Light' on pandemic experience
The
arts
suffered
during
the
COVID-19
pandemic,
but
they
also
served
as
a
balm.
The release of "One Light," a stunning video with original music and choreography, showcases the cathartic power of the arts to allow artists and audiences alike to process the pandemic experience from sudden isolation to reconnection.
As detailed on cleveland.com, the project is the brainchild of Baldwin Wallace University's Community Arts School (CAS), which did its own creative (and award-winning) pandemic pivot.
The nearly nine-minute performance took place on a rooftop overlooking Cleveland's skyline and Lake Erie and was professionally recorded in a multi-camera shoot that included a drone camera.
An expression of hope and resilience
With
choreography
by
Heather
Dennen,
program
coordinator
and
director
of
dance
for
BW
CAS,
and
new
music
by
Dr.
Clint
Needham,
the
BW
Conservatory
of
Music's
composer-in-residence,
"One
Light"
features
15
of
Dennen's
CAS
dance
students
ages
7
to
18.
"These kids gave me a lot of hope," Needham says about executing Dennen's vision for the project. "They were able to adapt to everything. They've come out on the other side of last year, not completely unscathed, but really excited about the future."
Needham's powerful, eight-minute-plus piece was performed and recorded by a string quartet comprised of BW and CAS faculty Sam Rotberg and Corrie Anne Riberdy on violin, Carol Ross on viola and Gayle Klaber on cello.
Speaking without words
But
it
was
the
young
dancers
who
brought
the
piece
to
life
against
the
expansive
backdrop.
As they rehearsed ahead of the three-hour shoot, Dennen immersed her students in the creative process, encouraging them to wrestle with the themes they were expressing through music and movement.
"I think it's important that the students have a voice in the process," explains Dennen. "That's why we dance. Because it lets us express things that words don't. These students are very in tune with what was happening in the world this year. They wanted to be an influence, to make a change, to have a voice. And at 13-14 years old, how do you give them a voice? Well, we're dancers, so we're going to dance."
Reflecting deeper purpose in dance
Dennen believes "One Light" also reflects the values of the BW Community Arts School, beyond just learning the steps, and that includes "equality, giving people a place to belong so nobody feels isolated. And, making sure that everyone feels respected, heard and valued as a human being."
"Sure," Dennen says, "I want my students to be good dancers. But, at the end of the day, I want them to be good human beings."
Watch the full video below and read the whole backstory on the BW Community Arts School website.