Weightless
The Kilbanes (Music, Lyrics & Book)
Kate Kilbane & Lila Blue |
In the beginning, everything looks and sounds like a rock
concert in an intimate space where audience members tiered on either side of
the stage will sit on cushions and sip wine from the bar nearby. Two women, one straddling a bass guitar, face
each other and begin singing a somewhat strange but melodically mesmerizing
song entitled “Hollow Bone,” with three band members in the background backing
them up on keyboard, electric guitar, and percussion. Slowly -- like the peeling off of light gauze
cloth on some precious object underneath -- a story begins to emerge from
occasional narrative and a couple more songs.
As the evening progresses, the magnetic powers of the music and the
increasingly intriguing, beguiling story combine with incredible lighting and
projections to enrapture an audience clearly hanging onto each note and line of
the unfolding story. After several years
in development and winning along the way awards for the concert-only version, Weightless receives its impressive,
innovative world premiere at Z Space, in co-production with Piece by Piece
Productions.
Kate Kilbane and Dan Moses – the wife/husband team better
known as just The Kilbanes – are both authors and composers of what they are
touting as a “new rock opera;” but as we the audience witness in this
electrifying evening, this is a new work that defies being categorized into any
one genre. The music is sometimes hard,
pulsating rock but often ventures into sounds of Appalachia, folk, or New Age
Indie. The story has roots ancient and
haunting, coming from one part of Ovid’s colossal Metamorphosis, a tale about two sisters – Procne and Philomela –
who in the Greek version are separated, tormented by an evil god, and willing
to risk all to reunite.
Taking that story as a beginning point, The Kilbanes have
created a mythical, dreamlike Weightless
that is timeless, mystical, sad, and triumphant. And in their tale, there is a not a
malevolent God but one who observes the story’s unfolding, providing both witty
and wise commentary to us as her captured audience.
Weightless opens
with the sisters singing to each other what are nothing short of love
songs. In “Breath and Your Bones,” their
voices sing in such close harmony that notes touch up against each other even
as they move closer to where their faces are only inches apart. The lyrical melodies are almost other-worldly
as they sing, “Your breath and your bones, your heart is my home, wherever I
roam.” The song merges into “whoa-oo-aa”
rounds of tightly wrapped threads that will become a recurring method common to
the Kilbanes hypnotic songs as their rock opera progresses. Both Kate Kilbane as Procne and Lila Blue as
Philomela offer voices that blend seamlessly when in duets and stand as
individual, memorable signatures when singing solo.
Lila Blue & Josh Pollock |
But sisters who have already escaped a controlling father in
order to live an idyllic life in the woods spearing fish for food and convening
with birds as friends soon find their lives upended. Procne comes across a rough-edged hunter named
Tereus (Josh Pollock) who combines his frenetic strumming of guitar and his jumping,
jerky dance of sorts with a singing voice that is half evil, half sexy to lure
her to his island – one surrounded by enough water to keep Philomea far
away. His persuasive, preying “Heaven”
leads to he and Procne landing on the island and then coming together as one in
a sultry duet, “Down,” with a baby boy soon being the result of their
union. In the meantime, Philomea wails
her grief in “Incantation” and her sadness and loneliness in a beautifully sung
“Mockingbird” in which she opines to her absent sister, “I’m lost inside the
world if there is no you ... Hear my cry, cross the sea.” What Philomea does not know is that the new
mother, her sister, is equally woeful and upset as she and Tereus duel in a fiercely
played, guitar showdown, with Tereus shaking the rafters warning, “You ain’t
going anywhere.”
Dan Moses, Kate Kilbane & Julia Brothers |
Watching all this drama play out is God, who earlier
appeared in her highly stylish, white cape with stunning burgundy boa -- the
latter to match her tightly fitting, slightly revealing blazer and pants (all
part of Christine Cook’s modern-feel costume designs). Declaring with a somewhat cynical smirk that
“the trouble with living forever is it takes forever ... there is nothing to do
but just endure it,” Julia Brothers is an observing God who fills in story
details while providing occasional gems such as this one. Often as she watches and listens, her God has
looks of complete disbelief (like when Philomea keeps trying to create wings
from leaves, sticks, and dirt). And
while she seems reluctant to intervene in this mounting mess of the mortals,
this God does in the end add some supernatural touches that will give the
increasingly dismal tale new hope and guarantee of being a myth to inspire and
even soar, as heard in the rousing, heart-touching finale, “Lift Me Up.”
Rounding out the cast are two more band members who play key
parts in the overall narrative without ever taking on a specific role. Dan Harris is the drummer whose percussion at
times has a distinct dialogue all its own to help progress the story. Dan Moses adds sung, background harmonies
while also knocking the socks off the keyboards.
Becca Wolf directs the show in a flow that magically mixes what
at times seems like a concert and at other times is clearly a blocked and
staged drama with music. The evening’s
power and ability to tell a story in ways unique and captivating is greatly
enhanced by the projection designs of Hana S. Kim. Illusions of water, forest, beaches, sky, and
sheer emotions crawl up and splatter against the long ramp that dominates
Angrette McCloskey’s scenic design, while the lighting design of Ray Oppenheimer
further enhances both the earthly and the supernatural elements of the rock
opera. The evening’s music, narratives,
and waves of enveloping sound are all masterfully coordinated and orchestrated
by the genius of sound designer, Gregory T. Kuhn.
In the song “Weightless,” we hear sung, “My feet are planted
on the earth, but I can’t feel the ground ... Weightless, suddenly my heart is
flying free.” Leaving Z Space’s world
premiere of The Kilbanes Weightless,
I for one exited soaring from an evening of music and story that defied
categorization but certainly that rocked my soul and heart, ready to tell
anyone I saw that this is a ‘must-see’ production.
Rating: 5 E, ‘MUST-SEE’
Weightless
continues through March 18, 2018 at Z Space, , 470 Florida Street, San
Francisco. Tickets are available at http://www.zspace.org/.
Photos by Julie Schuchard
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