Mythos Y Feiolinau-Mythos of Violins, Angharad Davies and Laura Cannell, June 2016

 

Wedi’u hysbrydoli gan y tirweddau dramatig a hynafol ble cawsant eu magu ymhell o’i gilydd ar arfordiroedd cyferbyniol y DU, mae dwy feiolinydd arbrofol ac arloesol yn cydweithio i gynhyrchu perfformiadau byw a dyfeisgar wedi’u hysbrydoli gan gorsydd, arfordiroedd, anheddau hynafol a modern, ynghyd â chysylltiad cydedmygol o’r feiolin.

Inspired by the dramatic and ancient landscapes they grew up in on the extreme opposite coastlines of the UK, two pioneering experimental violinists collaborate to produce innovative live performances inspired by marshlands, coasts, ancient and modern settlements and a mutual connection to the violin.

Angharad, Laura and the violin immerse themselves within, and respond to, the particular context of a former Welsh Presbyterian Chapel, and the Dyfi Estuary landscape within which it sits.

Mythos of Violins gratefully acknowledge the support of PRSF Beyond Borders.

Angharad Davies is a violinist, one at ease in both improvising and composition, with a wide discography as part of varied range of ensembles and groups. She’s a specialist in the art of ‘preparing’ her violin, adding objects or materials to it to extend its sound making properties. Her sensitivity to the sonic possibilities of musical situations and attentiveness to their shape and direction make her one of contemporary music’s most fascinating figures.

Playing fiddle, overbowed fiddle, double recorders, sometimes percussion and other rarefied wind instruments, Laura Cannell is a young woman drawing on ancient transcendental and earthly musics. Her sense of space, dynamics and working with acoustics is super sensitive. Whether solo or otherwise she explores the spaces between ancient, traditional and improvised music, often utilising a fragment from a medieval theme to her own end in a manner that embraces the apparitional, historical or the otherworldly. Her seemingly wild side, in such rarefied circles makes her involved yet emotive music really bristle and connect.

With invited guest Violinists Bethan Miles and Bree Enemark

Capel y Graig I

Addasiad gan Angharad a Laura o’r alaw Hoffter, o gyfrol Nicholas Bennett, Alawon fy Ngwlad (1896). A reworking by Angharad and laura of the melody Fondness from Nicholas Bennett’s edition of Alawon fy Ngwald (1896).
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lauracannell.co.uk
angharaddavies.com
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Nest, Anushiye Yarnell, May 2016

 

Dawns yw NEST; mae Anushiye Yarnell yn parhau o hyd i’w dawnsio gyda’i merch fach (sy’ nawr yn bedair oed). Mae nhw’n rhannu eu coreograffeg, gan gyflawni sawl tasg ar yr un pryd i ddatgelu diben cariad o fewn bywyd cyffredin. Mae eu dawns yn datod profiadau esblygol: y newyddion fel ffenest ar y byd, golygfeydd gyda mam, trafodaethau gyda natur a gwareiddiad, rhyngwyneb gyda cheir a dieithriaid. Cornel o’r bydysawd ble mae popeth yn dechrau, yn gorfod gorffen, a rywsut yn un cwlwm cyswllt. Sut a phryd ddylech chi adael i’r ochr dywyll ddod i’r wyneb?

“Mama, sut mae mae cael y tu allan y tu mewn?”

Dewch i mewn, os gwelwch yn dda. Mae yna groeso mawr i bob un.

Nest is a dance Anushiye Yarnell continues to perform with her daughter (now four years old). They share their choreography, multitasking to unfold the function of love in ordinary life. Their dance unravels encounters with evolution: the news as a window to the world, scenarios with my mother, negotiations with nature and civilisation, interfaces with cars and strangers. A corner of the universe where everything begins, must end and is somehow connected.How and when to let the dark side in?

“Mamma, how to outside inside?”

Please come in. You are all very welcome.

Nest is supported by the Arts Council of Wales.

‘I am a maker and performer whose work is drawn from personal experience, past and future mythologies. My works examine the intersection of dream and fantasy realms with ordinary life and cultural diversity, experientially unravelling the function of Love within our lives.

Through this terrain, each performance navigates its way towards a transformative destination. I dance through an assemblage of scores occupying the questions I have about life including death, humanity including the animal and the divine, love including the polarities of survival. Though personal experience is the source for these performances, they seek out the universal, the mutual, and the possibility for an imaginative experience, unique to each person within the audience. I strive to recreate each piece individually for each specific space responding to the framing of each moment, how it colludes with my life at the time and the intimate relational space into which I invite the audience.’

My dancing seeks out connections between my day to day experience of the world and anthropological, philosophical, poetic and art frameworks.’

Nest, Anushiye Yarnell, a film by Maria Alzamora


 

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‘…the most lightly eloquent, fascinatingly subversive and beautiful work’ Sally Marie, Sweetshop Revolution Dance