Emma-Louise Jordan: The Resonating Body - a podcast by C Savage-Kroll and E Cheah

from 2022-11-02T04:00:57

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Emma-Louise Jordan is a dancer and a choreographer. Originally from the UK, she studied classical dance in London at the Legat School of Russian ballet and at the Rambert School of Ballet and Contemporary Dance. As a dancer, she toured Europe with the Midlands Dance Company and the Vienna Festival Ballet and danced in Germany with Ballet Schindowski in Gelsenkirchen, Tanzwerk Nürnberg, and Theater Dortmund, among others. In 1999, she joined the Theater Freiburg with Amanda Miller and the interdisciplinary ballet company Pretty Ugly. Her work as a director and choreographer is not only full of wit and charm, but is also often deeply moving. Emma-Louise works with not just professionals but also amateurs: elderly people, teenagers, and people with and without disabilities. She truly has a gift for helping people express themselves, and we are incredibly lucky to call her our colleague at the Music University of Freiburg.


This conversation with Emma-Louise Jordan took place on December 15th, 2021, before the Russian invasion of Ukraine.


We spoke to her about:


Emma’s start in the dance world


Not getting into the Royal Ballet and how that changed her life for the better


Discovering modern dance


Being more ambitious about dance than career


The association of classical music with perfect ballet technique


“Functioning” as a dancer beyond the body’s capacity


Learning how to channel her energy to her best use


Working with non-professionals and their refreshing lack of baggage, how it is “almost more of a handicap to have this training”


The utopia of having no exams for dance in a music school


Connecting to breathing


Gyrokinesis®: touching and resonating in the body


Beginning to use her voice after finishing her dance career: movement becoming more creative by voicing things


How she ‘tricks herself’ out of her own habits of creativity


How she facilitates creativity for amateurs, tricking people out of being self-conscious


Integrating music into dance


Giving people security to allow for experimentation


Keeping people in intense movement so they will stay in their bodies, not just in their heads


Some of Emma’s favorite music:


Gavin Bryars: Jesus’ Blood Never Failed Me Yet


Bon Iver: Blindsided


Portico Quartet: Knee-Deep in the North Sea


J.S. Bach: Matthäus-Passion, BW 244


J.S. Bach: The Goldberg Variations, BWV 988, Glen Gould


The Swingle Singers: Jazz Sebastian Bach





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