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“That is one of the songs that still helps me get out of bed,” says Abraham, who has dealt with depression in the past. For Abraham, one of those is The Line, from D’Angelo’s second album, Voodoo, the gist of its lyrics about standing proud and being ready to take a risk. We have deep relationships, over decades, with songs we love. Those references are an example of the way Abraham’s dance lives in the world of movies, music, popular culture, political life and social systems, just as we do as people, but which is not always true of things we see on stage – especially dance, which does escapism and otherworldliness so well.Ībraham calls D’Angelo’s music his “best friend”, especially so in “that first year in college when I didn’t really have many friends”. He does talk about other films that influenced the characters and their arcs through the 70-minute piece, including the 2002 romcom Brown Sugar – no relation to the album – with Taye Diggs and Sanaa Lathan bonding over their childhood discovery of hip-hop, and another Lathan film, Love & Basketball (2000). Abraham hasn’t seen it: “But you’re the second person in the last 24 hours to mention it!” Listening to him talk about it, you can’t help think of Steve McQueen’s film Lovers Rock, from the Small Axe series, set at a house party, with minimal dialogue and maximum dancing.
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“This work is ultimately looking at love and self-love, and it has a lot of laughter, a lot of joy.” In An Untitled Love, the songs weave together with his own feelings on history, family and connection. That sense of love he has in that song for this woman, it’s so palpable it makes me crave that music.” “I’m a gay man, right, but there’s something about the way he’s singing that song Lady that I can relate to. He wanted to honour his parents and the aunts and uncles he grew up with, and draw a line through their histories, from his parents meeting at a historically black college in the 60s, to him studying at a historically black college himself in the 90s (Morgan State University in Baltimore).Ībraham would listen to D’Angelo’s debut album, Brown Sugar, in his freshman year, when he was “trying to think about what my space was, how I looked at culture, how I looked at love and considering what that would even mean for me”. Photograph: Andy Parsons/Times Newspapers Ltd Kyle Abraham, at the Royal Opera House studios. The music the audience hears in the theatre before the show will be his parents’ “grown-folks music” from back in the day: Luther Vandross, Anita Baker, the Isley Brothers. “You know, I’ve made so many works that look at the injustice that we face as a people, and I really wanted to make something much more celebratory,” he says.
His choreography is very human, embedded in real life and experience, sometimes with anger and frustration (as in Pavement, about violence in and against the black community, or Untitled America, about mass incarceration), but there is also hope and warmth, particularly so in An Untitled Love. He has an ability to reach across dance styles and tonalities, drawing on his past as a club kid, a musician, a student of contemporary dance and crucially, a black man growing up in the US. His last two works seen in the UK were The Weathering, a fresh, exuberant and tender piece for the Royal Ballet, and Requiem, a left-field Afrofuturist work set to Mozart for his own company A.I.M. Abraham, who has just turned 45, is a choreographer of great talent and range.