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Dancing for your dissertation

Baroque flautist Jed Wentz followed two years of dancing classes in order to develop the right feeling for the gestures required for the Baroque French opera genre ‘tragédie en musique’. On 9 December Wentz defended his PhD thesis on the subject, and on 8 December he gave a concert in the context of his research.

Much-praised musician

Page from an 18th century practice book. The faces were drawn by the student under the motto ‘fait tout seul’. (Collection Jed Wentz)
Page from an 18th century practice book. The faces were drawn by the student under the motto ‘fait tout seul’. (Collection Jed Wentz)

Of American origin, (1960) currently teaches at the Amsterdam Conservatory and in addition gives guest lessons, master classes and lectures at prestigious conservatories and universities across Europe and the US. He is a much-praised musician who has won various prizes.

Early on in his studies, Wentz became interested in musical performance. Partially as a result of his PhD research, this interest has increasingly focused on the relation between timing and gestures. Wentz’s definition of ‘gestures’ is not limited to sign language but extends to facial expression and full body expression. Wentz is graduating within the docARTES programme, a programme intended for practice-oriented PhD research in music by musicians and composers.

Naturalistic representation

Absolute naturalism, as valued in modern-day theatre, was not considered desirable in 17th and 18th century French opera: instead, the singers/actors who performed tragedies were expected to improve on nature rather than imitate it. At the same time, much emphasis was placed on ‘vérité’, meaning a naturalistic representation of human passions.

Rhythmic freedom

Singers and actors were expected to take dancing classes, not so much in order to become fully-fledged dancers but because a good basic posture was supposed to lead to more convincing gestures. Wentz himself also took dancing classes, and later schooled himself in gestures. On the basis of historical sources, he tried to determine more or less what these gestures would have looked like. In addition, he also developed his own gestures. His central research question focused on the influence of gestures on rhythm, in those places where the score allows for some rhythmic freedom. This is primarily the case when the score specifies a (the sustaining of a pause or note for a longer period than indicated) or a (free interpretation of tempo).

Eight performances

Wentz also studied expression in paintings, for instance in The Love Declaration by Cornelis Troost (Maurits Huis in Den Haag).
Wentz also studied expression in paintings, for instance in The Love Declaration by Cornelis Troost (Maurits Huis in Den Haag).

Wentz’s theoretical and practical research culminated in eight performances which he recorded on video. He chose four monologues from three tragédies en musique and of these he recorded both a sung and a spoken (by himself) version. He reached the conclusion that gestures might very well have influenced rhythm; in his reconstructions this was certainly the case. Wentz showed this by performing the music both with and without gesticulating singers. The difference was obvious.

Another conclusion is that gestures also strengthen the emotions that the music arouses in the audience. In other words: the road the Baroque opera of those days took to the hearts of its audience may have been different from the naturalistic approach preferred nowadays, but both have an emotional impact on the audience.

Emotie

Jed Wentz
The relationship between gesture and rhythmic freedom in the performance of French opera, 1673-1779
Humanities
Supervisor: Prof. Frans de Ruiter
Thursday 9 December 2010
Academy Building Rapenburg 73

Concert in the context of his research by
Jed Wentz and Musica ad Rhenum with among others

Jennifer Thorp, baroque dance, and Andréanne
Brisson Paquin, vocals.
Chamber music by Georg Philipp Telemann and
Michel Blavet, and monologues from Armide
by Jean-Baptiste Lully (texts by
William Shakespeare and René Bary).
Wednesday 8 December
Haitinkzaal, Amsterdam Conservatory.

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