No Sleep till Dawn of Day
The music I chose for this choreography, is a lullaby from
the Solomon Islands. The name of this song is “Nyuba nunuli”.
The diverse musical culture of these Islands, close to New
Guinea, are characterized by the great importance given to
polyphony. Savo is a small volcanic island of four miles in
diameter. Unlike the other islands, the traditional music of
Savo is purely vocal. In this lullaby, a vocalist asks the baby
not to cry or be afraid, even though she has neither arms to
carry anything, nor legs to stroll with. It is the song of the
'snake-woman', a figure of oral literature, also known else-
where in that part of the world.
The islands of the Southern Pacific are some of the most
remote places on our planet. They hold a key to the under-
standing of our ancestry - places where man is still in close
touch with his natural surroundings and totally dependent
on them - places far enough from us to preserve some of
the essential aspects of human existence - but unfortunately
also far enough to be abused by experiments with nuclear
weapons.
This dichotomy - this schizophrenic compulsion to preserve
and to destroy - seems to be part of the human nature.
Jiří Kylián