Ballet Types 2009 Winter Season - New York City Ballet

Ballet Types 2009 Winter Season

divert15.jpg 
Divertimento No. 15
Choreography by George Balanchine
© The George Balanchine Trust
 
Photo © Paul Kolnik

There are many types of ballets to choose from when trying to decide which ballet program to attend. There are many different ways to describe a ballet. Sometimes the historic period in which a ballet was created will tell you a great deal. Often knowing who the choreographer or composer is might give you a clue. Titles may tell you everything about a ballet and other times they can be deliberately teasing or misleading. At New York City Ballet ballets frequently take the title of the score as the title of the ballet.

Part of the enjoyment of ballet comes when one starts to appreciate the “labels” or titles. It is not unlike learning about wine. Vintages, chateaus, grape variety, type of wine, etc. all come together when picking a specific wine to see if it is to your taste. Much the same is true of ballet. Like football or other sports, understanding comes from seeing it frequently. Ballet does not have “Hail Mary passes” or double plays; but its moments of surpassing beauty will cause you to gasp and send shivers up your spine.

Below are six categories that will give you an idea of the types of ballet that you can see during the 2009 Winter Season. Often several “types” will appear on a single program. The miracle of a NYCB performance is in the astonishing range of artistic vision and expression that comprise a single visit to the New York State Theater.

 

 

 A Fairy Tale or Story

Coppélia
Les Noces
George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker™
Romeo and Juliet
Slanughter on Tenth Avenue
The Steadfast Tin Soldier
Swan Lake
West Side Story Suite 


Romantic and Beautiful

Brahms-Schoenberg Quartet
Chaconne
Four Bagatelles
Stabat Mater
La Valse
Vienna Waltzes


Light or Comedic

Interplay
Stars and Stripes
Tarantella

Contemporary and Dramatic

After the Rain
The Cage
Chiaroscuro
Concerto DSCH
Dances at a Gathering
Glass Pieces
Oltremare 

Papillions
Robert Schumann’s “Davidsbündlertänze”
La Stravaganza
Stravinsky Violin Concerto


Elemental and Spare

Concerto Barocco
The Four Temperaments
Halleluja Junction
Mercurial Maneouvres
Monumentum Pro Gesualdo
Movements for Piano and Orchestra
Slice to Sharp


Classically Brilliant and Virtuosic

Ballo della Regina
Brahms/Handel
Divertimento No. 15 

Tschaikovsky Suite No. 3

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