|
The History of the Music
A couple of decades earlier a specialist in composing music
for gymnastics, Rudolf Bode, had already stressed the importance
of improvisation: "...for the teaching of gymnastics
as far as it is accompanied by music, the ability to employ
some improvisation, even though it be produced by the most
simple means, is absolutely essential... Every kind of merely
outer simulation must necessarily lead to monotony..."
Obviously, Gurdjieff worked along the same lines and was on
his guard for any premature fixations. Movements and music
had to be alive. The truth of his work should present itself
in an ongoing creative process, in an ever new and immaculate
form in every moment.
For those who regard such processes as self-evident it will
be useful to point out that an equal balance between music
and dance is rare. Historically, one of the two would be dominant:
either the music written to sustain the ballet, or the ballet
fitted onto the existing music.
While performing Movements, one can experience sound in a
totally new way, as if it illuminates one's inner life. A
unique balance comes about in us; the music, the gestures
and our inner aspirations become one and it is as if we enter
a new place, one without walls, without time. At such a moment,
we experience life in a way that will be difficult to forget.

|