The Seasons

  /    /  The Seasons

Ballet for 22 dancers
Duration 60 minutes

Music
Antonio Vivaldi & Giovanni Antonio Guido

Choreography
Thierry Malandain

Set and costume designer
Jorge Gallardo

Lighting
François Menou

Costume production
Véronique Murat, Charlotte Margnoux, assistées d’Anaïs Abel

Set production
Frédéric Vadé

Accessories production
Annie Onchalo

Set and props assistants
Nicolas Rochais, Gorka Arpajou, Félix Vermandé, Raphaël Jeanneret, Christof t’Siolle, Txomin Laborde- Peyre, Maruschka Miramon, Karine Prins, Sandrine Mestas Gleizes, Fanny Sudres et Fantine Goulot

Coproducers
Château de Versailles Spectacles – Opéra Royal de Versailles Orchestre de l’Opéra Royal de Versailles • Festival de Danse de Cannes – Côte d’Azur France • Teatro Victoria Eugenia – Ballet T – Ville de Donostia San Sebastián • Opéra de Saint-Etienne • Theater Bonn – Allemagne • Teatro la Fenice – Venise (Italie) • CCN Malandain Ballet Biarritz

Partners
Opéra de Reims • Espace Jéliote d’Oloron Sainte-Marie • Théâtre Olympia d’Arcachon | Soutiens | Fonds de dotation Malandain pour la Danse • Suez • Association Amis du Malandain Ballet Biarritz • Carré des Mécènes du Malandain Ballet Biarritz

Note of intent

Based on an idea by Laurent Brunner, Director of the Château de Versailles Spectacles, and Stefan Plewniak, Violonist and Principal Conductor of the Royal Opera of Versailles, this original production, which will premiere in November 2023, combines Antonio Vivaldi’s famous Four Seasons and the little-known works of his contemporary and compatriot Giovanni Antonio Guido.

Having unfurled their passionate energy long before their publication in Amsterdam in 1725, the first melodies form a cycle of four violin concertos naturally named Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter. Each title has three movements, whose main purpose is not virtuosity. New at the time, they were preceded by sonnets attributed to Vivaldi and provide a succession of pastoral scenes descriptively celebrating nature.

One of the most international opuses with more than a thousand recordings to date, not counting concerts, catalogues of telephone on-hold music and adverts, this universal hymn to nature, rediscovered in the mid 20th century, has the ability to please. Hence its immense popularity, hence also the weariness, or even the rejection that the work can arouse. Thus, after Igor Stravinsky stated in 1959, “Vivaldi is greatly overrated – a boring fellow who could compose the same form so many times”(1) , people talked about easy music to the point of saying, such as the composer Luigi Dallapiccola, or Stravinsky again(2) , that “the red-headed priest” composed “the same concerto five hundred times”. This is not true and completely unfair.

That being said, in all their grandeur, in terms of their promise, it is true that the Venetian musician’s Four Seasons have been heard so often, exploited so much to the point of misunderstanding, that in response, having become truly old repetitive melodies, they can be irritating, cause total indifference, or in our case, overwhelm us with gloomy thoughts. And even more so in today’s disillusioned and corrupt climate, where nature’s deterioration constitutes an existential threat. In contrast, since the word nature literally means birth, Giovanni Antonio Guido’s The Four Seasons of the Year should, because of their unique nature, provide a breath of fresh air, renewal and a reason for hope.

Published in Versailles around 1726, but perhaps earlier than Vivaldi’s, since they may have been written around 1716 for the opening exhibition of four oval paintings by Jean-Antoine Watteau representing the four seasons which

adorned the Paris mansion of Pierre Crozat, Treasurer of France, patron and collector. As for Guido, a first-rate Genoese violinist, he served Philippe d’Orléans, Regent of France, before entering the service of his son Louis. Written in the French form of Suite de danses, like Vivaldi, the score sets four anonymous poems to music – Les Caractères des saisons. Guido attempted to describe seasonal changes by adding notes of green, blue and very light pink. But also rural deities, as in Les Saisons by Abbot Jean Pic, performed at the Royal Academy of Music from 1695 to 1722, with choreography by Louis Pécour. Accompanied by melodies composed by Pascal Collasse and Louis Lully, the ballet had four “entries”, a sacred number associated with creation, balance and harmony. Four doors that we will cross through to walk on the paths of idealism.

How far will we go like this? I don’t know… Guido’s bowing respectfully imitates the course of the seasons, but we are at the theatre, where everything is false and gets lost in the atmosphere.

This is the nature of the choreographer’s problem with the limits of his art. Whereas the solution, if we wish to continue gazing at nature when it opens its heart to spring, is to respect it without limits or pretence.

After the hymns to humanity and the living which comprised Le Sang des étoiles (2004), Noé (2017), la Pastorale (2019), Sinfonia (2020) and L’Oiseau de feu (2021), ideally, Les Quatre Saisons should not become false in its attempts to be real.

  Thierry Malandain, February 2021

(1) Conversations with Igor Stravinsky, Robert Craft, 1959, p.84

(2) Vivaldi : Amour de la Musique, Marc Pincherle, 1955, p.55

Choreographer Thierry Malandain, director of Ballet Biarritz, always manages to spring a surprise in his classical-contemporary vein, with a keen sense of collective and ensemble writing.


Télérama, Rosita Boisseau • 5 December 2023

When the curtain opens, it reveals a tableau of striking beauty. The chiaroscuro silhouettes of the twenty-two dancers from the Ballet de Biarritz stand out against a luminous backdrop of superb, monumental black petals designed by Jorge Gallardo. Vivaldi’s Spring brings them to life, and from round to round, in highly graphic compositions, they sketch out a faltering humanity.


La Terrasse, Delphine Baffour • 1st December 2023

Thierry Malandain’s reworking of ‘Les Saisons’, premiered at the Cannes Dance Festival, is a masterpiece by the director of the Biarritz Ballet.


Le Figaro, Ariane Bavelier • 14 December 2023

Contacts

Malandain Ballet Biarritz
Yves Kordian – directeur délégué – y.kordian@malandainballet.com
Lise Philippon – chargée de diffusion +33 (0)5 59 24 96 98 – l.philippon@malandainballet.com