Ballet Mecanique at The Wolfsonian-FIU
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Ballet Mecanique at The Wolfsonian-FIU
George Antheil arrives in New York for the historic (and disastrous) American premiere of Ballet mécanique at Carnegie Hall, April 1927. Courtesy of the estate of George Antheil.



MIAMI BEACH, FL.- The Wolfsonian-Florida International University will mount a fully automated/robotic orchestration of the then-scandalous 1924 Ballet mécanique, the most notorious “lost” musical composition of the twentieth century, which was both hailed and hated upon its debut. Its young American composer George Antheil, known for his outrageous composition and piano recitals and for stirring up controversy, was considered by the Parisian artistic community as the musical spokesman for modernist ideals. Ballet mécanique was considered Antheil’s magnum opus. The original composition calls for ten human musicians, including two pianists; four bass drums; three xylophones; a tam-tam; seven electric bells; three airplane propellers; a siren; and sixteen player pianos. Highly rhythmic, often brutalistic, the piece combines atonal music and jazz.

Originally conceived as a score to accompany a film by French Dadaist artist Fernand Léger and American cinematographer Dudley Murphy, Ballet mécanique was never performed the way the composer envisioned it, because the technology―most significantly, the ability to synchronize multiple player pianos―did not then exist. The film, which runs for approximately 16 minutes, is a highly abstract collage of images, ranging from an animated Cubist caricature of Charlie Chaplin to half-a-dozen kitchen funnels dancing on a string cut together in the Dadaist fashion of continuously looping images backwards, forwards, and upside down. There were several attempts to present the film with Antheil’s music, but it wasn’t until the 1990s that music technology advanced to where Antheil’s piece could finally be played in its original orchestration. The first full performance of the piece was produced in 1999. The extraordinary robotic performance that will be mounted by The Wolfsonian is presented by Paul D. Lehrman, coordinator of music technology at Tufts University in Medford , Massachusetts and Eric Singer, director of the League of Electrical Musical Urban Robots (LEMUR) in Brooklyn , New York . Together they created the programming and the robotic mechanisms to bring this work to life.

The Wolfsonian is planning a DADA weekend celebration, consisting of a performance of Ballet mécanique by the New World Symphony Percussion Consort on Friday, November 30 at the Lincoln Theatre. The performance will feature a 1953 arrangement of the work for four pianos and the same extensive percussion battery. The following evening, Saturday December 1, from 7 to 11 pm, The Wolfsonian will present the robotic version at a DADA party, which also includes a screening of Léger’s film from 1925. Tickets $100; $85 for members and NWS subscribers. This includes the Friday NWS performance and Saturday evening DADA party and performance. Saturday-only tickets $85; $75 for members and NWS subscribers. RSVP required: 305.535.2631 or rsvp@thewolf.fiu.edu. Dada inspired attire desired. Yamaha Reproducing pianos and other instrumentation installed in the museum’s sixth-floor gallery from December 2-11 will play Ballet mécanique and Bad Boy Made Good, a documentary about Antheil. Sponsored by the Dade Community Foundation’s John S. and James L. Knight Donor- Advised Fund; Northern Trust; Piano Music Center , Coral Gables ; and Yamaha Corporation of America.










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