The Prague Post - Dance gets world's first heavy metal ballet

EUR -
AED 4.273929
AFN 79.563008
ALL 96.99956
AMD 446.699302
ANG 2.082887
AOA 1067.172475
ARS 1513.495974
AUD 1.811984
AWG 2.095068
AZN 1.980282
BAM 1.953014
BBD 2.342988
BDT 141.538113
BGN 1.953548
BHD 0.438761
BIF 3470.03368
BMD 1.163765
BND 1.497287
BOB 8.039189
BRL 6.393747
BSD 1.163286
BTN 101.457565
BWP 15.652951
BYN 3.917732
BYR 22809.794581
BZD 2.333961
CAD 1.616231
CDF 3343.496888
CHF 0.93904
CLF 0.028631
CLP 1123.196525
CNY 8.351411
CNH 8.357165
COP 4682.6879
CRC 587.010619
CUC 1.163765
CUP 30.839773
CVE 110.109834
CZK 24.527105
DJF 207.16142
DKK 7.464471
DOP 72.226667
DZD 151.212643
EGP 56.475771
ERN 17.456475
ETB 164.46973
FJD 2.645005
FKP 0.865247
GBP 0.865015
GEL 3.136416
GGP 0.865247
GHS 12.796792
GIP 0.865247
GMD 83.791319
GNF 10084.788579
GTQ 8.920238
GYD 243.392698
HKD 9.093224
HNL 30.430594
HRK 7.530958
HTG 152.212234
HUF 395.625373
IDR 18989.153988
ILS 3.979477
IMP 0.865247
INR 101.556595
IQD 1523.620194
IRR 48936.319813
ISK 143.399073
JEP 0.865247
JMD 186.953334
JOD 0.825084
JPY 172.080701
KES 150.300222
KGS 101.76892
KHR 4663.728462
KMF 491.70293
KPW 1047.397848
KRW 1627.932877
KWD 0.355798
KYD 0.969496
KZT 625.32909
LAK 25217.089376
LBP 104686.123573
LKR 351.187741
LRD 233.256329
LSL 20.592139
LTL 3.436295
LVL 0.70395
LYD 6.311997
MAD 10.494032
MDL 19.585662
MGA 5128.103994
MKD 61.4534
MMK 2442.664639
MNT 4184.984793
MOP 9.36261
MRU 46.438559
MUR 53.311782
MVR 17.921883
MWK 2017.287258
MXN 21.839212
MYR 4.916326
MZN 74.375976
NAD 20.592493
NGN 1787.007942
NIO 42.808938
NOK 11.851085
NPR 162.331705
NZD 1.998999
OMR 0.447468
PAB 1.163336
PEN 4.05941
PGK 4.916987
PHP 66.442257
PKR 330.074533
PLN 4.252011
PYG 8406.118035
QAR 4.239907
RON 5.054459
RSD 117.181879
RUB 93.77162
RWF 1683.935532
SAR 4.367349
SBD 9.566582
SCR 17.172541
SDG 698.842715
SEK 11.16307
SGD 1.49826
SHP 0.914537
SLE 27.112333
SLL 24403.568427
SOS 664.905869
SRD 44.012444
STD 24087.586481
STN 24.466888
SVC 10.178656
SYP 15131.221706
SZL 20.599299
THB 37.996961
TJS 10.935594
TMT 4.073178
TND 3.405343
TOP 2.725656
TRY 47.644305
TTD 7.883399
TWD 35.514597
TZS 2898.804816
UAH 47.924765
UGX 4147.155854
USD 1.163765
UYU 46.774086
UZS 14501.564486
VES 160.549411
VND 30761.219146
VUV 139.547262
WST 3.150773
XAF 655.076088
XAG 0.030753
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.145133
XCG 2.09668
XDR 0.814104
XOF 655.03393
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.537305
ZAR 20.602767
ZMK 10475.282277
ZMW 26.902822
ZWL 374.731865
  • VOD

    -0.0750

    11.825

    -0.63%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    16.12

    -0.37%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    73.27

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.4300

    71.65

    -0.6%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    23.42

    -0.09%

  • GSK

    0.1000

    40.17

    +0.25%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    25.54

    -0.78%

  • RIO

    0.2950

    60.915

    +0.48%

  • AZN

    0.2200

    80.74

    +0.27%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    48.36

    -0.68%

  • JRI

    -0.0250

    13.305

    -0.19%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    13.85

    +0.72%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    58.85

    -0.27%

  • CMSD

    -0.0850

    23.605

    -0.36%

  • BCC

    -0.9800

    83.52

    -1.17%

  • BP

    -0.0300

    33.85

    -0.09%

Dance gets world's first heavy metal ballet
Dance gets world's first heavy metal ballet / Photo: Paul ELLIS - AFP

Dance gets world's first heavy metal ballet

Pirouette, leap, air guitar, stomp. In a practice room in central England, dancers move gracefully in unison, combining classical ballet with new, heavy metal-inspired steps.

Text size:

Welcome to "Black Sabbath -- The Ballet", the brainchild of Cuban dance superstar Carlos Acosta, artistic director of the Birmingham Royal Ballet.

Determined to celebrate the cultural treasures of the UK's second city since his arrival in 2020, Acosta took his idea to Black Sabbath co-founder and guitarist Tony Iommi, who gave it his blessing along with the group's original vocalist Ozzy Osbourne.

"I was fascinated with the idea. I thought 'How are they going to do that'," Iommi, 75, told AFP Thursday in Birmingham.

"I just couldn't imagine how they'd do ballet to Black Sabbath and then I thought well maybe they're going to use the... softer tracks, but no they went for 'Black Sabbath', 'War Pigs', 'Iron Man'," he said.

"I think I was just really intrigued."

The full-length, three-act ballet opens in Birmingham, the pioneering group's home city, in September before going on tour. Rehearsals have just begun.

- Bat incident -

According to writer Richard Thomas, the ballet is the "rags-to-riches story" of four young men who went from the "factory floor to one of the most successful bands in rock history", although he stressed it would not be a documentary set to music and dance.

The legendary group's original line-up was Osbourne, Iommi, bassist Geezer Butler and drummer Bill Ward.

They were instrumental in creating heavy metal in the early 1970s with dark and high-volume guitars coupled with a keen interest in the occult.

"It's very simple. It's like Black Sabbath meets the Birmingham Royal Ballet," Thomas said.

There would, however, be use of archive interviews and also some famous Black Sabbath stories such as how Iommi lost the tips of two fingers in an industrial accident on his last day working at a sheet metal factory.

Also making an appearance will be the tale of the "Stonehenge" set that had to be dumped after a measurements mix-up meant it was so big it wouldn't fit into auditoriums.

And he said there might "possibly be a brief mention of the bat incident", in which Osbourne thought a fan had thrown a rubber bat onstage only to discover -- after he took a bite -- that it was real.

For Acosta, 39, there had been an immediate rapport with Iommi after he first approached him with the project.

"I didn't know the man (or) how we were going to hit it off, but obviously we both come from the same background in terms of working-class and poor families... and the chemistry was instant," he said.

The former star dancer said he came to the music of Black Sabbath late due to growing up in Cuba.

- 'Stratospheric' -

"I grew up in the 1980s, I wanted to be Michael Jackson. I didn't know anything about Black Sabbath," he said, adding that he only discovered the group through a friend in the late 1990s.

"This was the music of those who are marginalised so I found it very interesting."

Musically, composer Chris Austin said it had been difficult to know where to start as the Black Sabbath back catalogue was so huge.

But he said once they narrowed it down it had been easy to be inspired by the music's "glorious irregularity" and "enormous shifts of tempo", combined with Osbourne's early "stratospheric" vocals.

The show will be a treat for fans after the group, including three of the original members, ended their last-ever tour with a final concert in Birmingham in 2017.

Iommi said he was as interested as everyone else to discover how the ballet would turn out, but that he had been confident in Acosta and his team from the start.

"I know from our fans that there is a lot of excitement to come to the show," he said, adding that he expected people would be particularly keen to join in.

"I think it will be great."

Z.Pavlik--TPP