Los Angeles Times

A truly fab day in the life

‘Pepperland’ honors the 50th anniversar­y of ‘Sgt. Pepper.’

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

SANTA BARBARA — From Carlsbad to Santa Barbara, the Southern California coast is peppered with pepper — Pepperland Recording Studios, Pepperdine University, Pepper Lane in Montecito, the Pepper Tree Inn in Santa Barbara just up the road from the Granada Theatre, where choreograp­her Mark Morris’ “Pepperland” had its California premiere Thursday night.

An evening-long dance program based on parts of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” “Pepperland,” of course, felt very much like it belonged.

Indeed, in an extraordin­ary nod to California, Morris even found a way to pepper George Harrison’s Indian raga-inspired “Within You Without You” with an Indonesian gamelan lick in the style of the late California­n maverick composer Lou Harrison.

The dance was originally commission­ed by the city of Liverpool, to celebrate the 50th anniversar­y of the release of the Beatles’ historic album, along with a host of other internatio­nal presenters, including UC Santa Barbara’s Arts & Lectures series. For the next couple of years, it will tour the world. Or maybe even across the universe. It’s that dazzling. (Upcoming local performanc­es will be at the San Diego Civic Theatre on Saturday, and at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa in June 2019.)

Here comes some of what’s new under the Beatles sun. The visionary German composer Karl- heinz Stockhause­n, who was among the notable figures who found their way onto the legendary album cover collage, is introduced as a female dancer in DayGlo turquoise and purple.

“A Day in the Life” begins as an otherworld­ly theremin solo with a cocktail lounge piano accompanim­ent. Morris’ frisky dancers mimic every single instance of “Penny Lane” with choreograp­hy of such dazzling fast-forward quickness you can’t catch half of it.

I would suggest that the most astounding achievemen­t of “Sgt. Pepper” is not that it invented the concept album, now a dated concept in the age of streaming songs and making your own playlists. Nor is it that this is the first great pop album — meant to be, like electronic music, studio-made, not composed of songs intended for live performanc­e. The difference is like that of film and the stage, but obviously “Sgt. Pepper” is, in the end, performabl­e.

Instead, the great advance of “Sgt. Pepper” was the Beatles’ genius for contrastin­g provincial­ly comfy old Liverpool with the mod rockers of the late 1960s as well as the psychedeli­c visions of unseen, unimaginab­le other worlds. No pop record of the past, and none of such significan­ce since, had its musical range, from music hall sentimenta­lity to Bach to Ravi Shankar to the avant-garde of Stockhause­n, John Cage and Luciano Berio.

The look of “Pepperland” — Elizabeth Kurtman’s mod costumes are bright as neon, with vividly clashing colors and patterns — is not so surprising, nor is Morris’ playful choreograp­hy. That’s the popular side of Morris, such as in his hit “The Hard Nut.” But every single move in the dance is, while being utterly musical, entirely unexpected. What first seems wrong always feels right, as though, to confirm John Lennon’s lyric, “Nothing real, but nothing to get hung about.”

The music includes “Sgt. Pepper,” “With a Little Help From My Friends,” “When I’m Sixty Four” and “A Day in the Life,” along with “Penny Lane.” But other music comes from the jazz pianist Ethan Iverson, a longtime Morris collaborat­or, writing for a mixed band that includes soprano sax, trombone, harpsichor­d, percussion and theremin. Baritone Clinton Curtis, who traipses between the classical and pop worlds, adds cool, uninflecte­d lyrics.

The rest of the hourlong score is made up of Iverson numbers meant to reflect on aspects of the songs, say a riff on Bach (the trumpet solo in “Penny Lane” having been inspired by the second “Brandenbur­g” Concerto) with bravura piano and harpsichor­d runs, or extending a bluesy guitar lick here, the album’s opening chord extended there. One number is meant to introduce some of the characters on the cover.

Nothing sounds like “Sgt. Pepper.” Nothing looks like “Sgt. Pepper” either. Some dances have a theme. Some don’t. Dancers simply have a ball in chorus line routines. Small psychodram­as play out with couples and threesomes but not exactly as narrative to the songs, except in “A Day in the Life,” which is done as an instrument­al.

Few dances end where they start. Morris and Iverson are masters of the fakeout in general and the false ending in particular. Morris continuall­y plays around with the Beatles’ own contrasts between sentiment and abstractio­n and sheer fantasy, although he throws in an extra helping of irony now and then.

An overall mood of flippancy (of which Morris is also an amusing master) turns out not to be flippancy at all but a deep investigat­ion in the way movement tells us who we are.

Ultimately Morris’ is the gift of life, as when a mindless meditating hippie sits cross-legged on the floor, while the rest of the company grooves around him in “Within You Without You,” until he finally rises, not enlightene­d, just alive.

Nor is “Pepperland” sheer joy, although you can be deceived into thinking it is. It can be so much bouncy fun, especially in Morris’ brilliantl­y animated big ensemble numbers, untouched by cliché.

But the lonely bits remain in the memory too, the way solo dancers stand apart from the crowd, the way Rob Schwimmer’s desolate theremin solos, Iverson’s torchy piano solos and Curtis’ cheerless vocals could, on their own, comprise a lonely hearts club combo.

“Pepperland” is “Sgt. Pepper” at 50, looking back with irresistib­le fondness — what fun it all was — but also with wisdom, knowing that it was real and was something to get hung about.

 ?? David Bazemore ?? “PEPPERLAND,” which celebrates the Beatles’ seminal “Sgt. Pepper” through song and dance, had its California premiere at the Granada Theatre in Santa Barbara.
David Bazemore “PEPPERLAND,” which celebrates the Beatles’ seminal “Sgt. Pepper” through song and dance, had its California premiere at the Granada Theatre in Santa Barbara.

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