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1) - "Messidor" (1998) for orchestra
is a free and graceful fantasy inspired by the various masterpieces,
both literary and musical, entitled "A Midsummer Night's Dream".
The definition was used to define the period from June 19th
to July 24th during the French Revolution when the yearly
calendar was temporarily changed. The work is dedicated to
my husband, the conductor Gilberto Serembe.  |
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2) - "Florestan" (1997) for large orchestra is a symphonic work freely
inspired by Schumann's well known imaginary character portrayed in his many essays on music,
later collected in the book entitled "Gesammelte Schriften uber Musik und Musiker. "Florestan"
reflects the fiery, passionate and fantastic side of Schumann's own character. I also
consider it an autobiographical portrait.  |
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3) - "La Triade" ("The Triad" - 1994) for large orchestra is a symphonic poemfreely inspired by a fable by Aesop.
The three elements that make up thedrama are a fox, a snake and a tangle of thorny brambles caught up in atempestuous and
menacing scenery (musical atmospheres and sound effects). The literary text follows.
Rain pours down incessantly, a curtain of water shaken at times byviolent gusts of wind. It seems as if the deluge will never end - clearskies
and the sun are only remote recollections or perhaps even an illusionof the mind. Nightfall comes precipitously. The clouds pile up, a greatshapeless
flock, accompanied by thunder and fringed with lightening. Fromtime to time loose ends of whitish vapour, at a lower level, dash about inunforeseen
directions like advanced patrols on sudden reconnaissancemissions. The bad weather seems to have reached a paroxysm in thisuninhabited
valley between its craggy straits. Thunderbolts with crashesand flashes hurl down burning the top of the unarmed fir trees. The streaminordinately swollen has left its bed and is crashing with fury against rocks usually out of reach of its foaming assaults. It breaks into the banks among the roots of the trees, eroding the earth and attempting at thestability of the trunks. At times, constrained between rocky cliffs, it runsimpetuous and compact as if going to face new battles and conquests.
And here comes a fox, moved by fear and by destiny. The drenched furemphasises its thinness. It moves along the higher edges of the
stream,looking for a safe shelter. Restlessly it turns its head glancing over itsshoulder as if in fear of new and immediate dangers. It reaches
a pointsufficiently high above the stream that is now spreading unopposed across aplateau. The fox finds shelter in a small cavity in the rock just
slightlylarger than a coat. It leans its sharp muzzle out, the watchful eyesglittering in the dark. Suddenly its attention is taken by an indefiniteshape among the boulders and the waves.
A great tangle of thorny twigs, dead in winter and torn from their graveby the flood, is being dragged violently downstream. Among its pricklythorns,
washed and almost resuscitated by the waters, the coils of a snakeare untangling. It is alive and poisonous and is trying to keep its headabove
the foam in a desperate yearning for oxygen and a haven lessprecarious than that in which it is forcibly seized. That great knot ofboughs and
thorns, poison and scales passes out of the narrow passage intothe wider stream just under the rocky spur on which the fox has foundshelter.
For one instant the leading characters of the play are alltogether. A gleam sparks suddenly from the brain of the fox which breaksinto a chilling laugh:
"The pilot is worthy of the boat, Ha, Ha, Ha. " Its raucous voice seems for a moment to overpower the uproar of the elements, whilst the bundle
of twigsand its occupant race speedily across the plain and disappear intoinscrutable darkness.
Fable by Aesop elaborated by Giuseppe Brusa and translated from Italian. Both the composer and the author were inspired by Leonardo
da Vinci's description of "The Deluge" taken from his treatise on painting.
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4) - "Nittemero Symphony"(1985-1988) for orchestra (or ensemble of 14 performers) is cyclic; there are themes with a unitary character
recurringin all three movements. The first, an "Allegro ma non troppo", is in avaried rond form; the second, a "Largo", is a free fantasy;
the third, an "Allegro ma non troppo", is in sonata form. They reflect the course andvariations of feelings and moods during the entire
24-hour cycle of a day according to the astronomical definition of ancient Greek times. (Nittemero,from ancient Greek, means night and day. )
The cycle was measured from middayto midday of the following day. There was thus an afternoon, (Allegro), anight, (Largo), and a morning,
(Allegro). A further connecting factor is themain tonal centre of B-flat, common to all three movements. New techniques,Neo-Tonal (in part Minimalist),
are amalgamated with traditionalcontrapuntal techniques. The work is dedicated to my best friend Anna on thebirth of her son Giovanni.
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5) - "Favole" ("Fables" - 1982-1983) for orchestra is a work for young peopleand the not so young, with a little philosophy, some cultural tradition
anda pinch of ironic humour, but above all a great deal of fantasy and libertyin the wake of the literary texts that inspired them. The work
was dedicatedto my godson Matteo in occasion of his birth.
1) The Lion in the Donkey's Skin - (Aesop)
2) The Real Nightingale and the Mechanical One - (Andersen)
3) The Ant and the Cicada - (La Fontaine)
4) The Wolf and the Sheep - (Aesop)
5) The Ugly Duckling - (Andersen)
6) The Philosophical Fly (Aesop)
7) Puss in Boots (Perrault)
The stories and the characters are very well known. Most of the Fablesresort to the same instruments used in famous examples
such as the flute forthe nightingale, the oboe for the duck and the clarinet for the cat as inProkofiev's "Peter and the Wolf".
Within the seven free fantasies I haveidentified the cries of the animals in a spontaneous and natural way:
1) The donkey's attempts at roaring, his clip-clopping and his final braying.
2)The difference between the lyrical melody of the real nightingale (flute)and the more rhythmical and less emotional melody,
similar to a carillon, ofthe mechanical bird played by the piccolo and the glockenspiel. All of asudden the mechanical nightingale
breaks down, onomatopoeically expressed bythe glissandi of the strings and by the sound of the rattle at the end ofthe last
carillon-like section, so the real nightingale is able to triumphwith its lyrical singing.
3) The difference between the industrious andtenacious ant, represented by short, erratic scales and by the persistentrhythm
of the hammer on the anvil, and the cicada, represented by thesaxophone with its languid tone and cabaret-like music with
maracas. Theguiro imitates the chirping of the cicada.
4) The dark and sinister wolf,represented by the brass (mostly the horns) but also by the bassoons and thelower strings which
together create a dark texture, and its attempts attrying to catch the sheep, represented by a lighter texture consisting ofthe complete
wind and string sections. In particular, the sheep's bleatingat times interrupts this more gentle and rocking motion.
At first the sheepis able to persuade the wolf not to eat it, but not for long because thenthe impatient wolf suddenly gobbles it in one mouthful.
5) The ugly littleduckling, represented by the oboe which expresses its solitude and sadnessinterrupted by bursts of youthful playfulness.
The various phases of themetamorphosis of the ugly duckling into a magnificent white swan are represented by the orchestra playing
waves of tremolos and trills, the lastof which transforms the atmosphere into one of calm and purity with thesound of the ascending horn.
6) A fly falls into a frying pan. During itslast minute of life its thoughts are: "I have eaten, I have drunk, I havehad a bath. What more do
I want from life?". . . . . and so it dies. Thismovement is a Funeral March whose dynamics pass from forte (the screechingof various
instruments and the fizzling of the suspended cymbal) to piano(the laments of the strings), to fade away to silence with a glissando
ofthe timpani which represents the fly's spirit ascent to heaven.
7) A RoyalMarch opens the final movement. The central section, describes the cat'scrafty and cunning behaviour and its pranks,
begins with three "meows" ofthe clarinet and is full of contrasting timbral effects, particularly by thepercussion. The return of the Royal March marks the conclusion.
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6) - "Adagio" (1996) for string
orchestra is a freely structured composition in a single movement
inspired by well-known masterpieces such as those of Albinoni,
Mahler (Adagietto), Rodrigo and Barber. Independent of a pre-established
form (sonata or suite), it originates as an autonomous composition
in which Neo-Tonal techniques are amalgamated with contrappuntal
techniques and yet it follows a certain formal tradition and
an expressive style which have distinguished the numerous
"Adagios" of the past.
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7) - "Fanfare" (1996) for large
orchestra is a free fantasy inspired by various compositions
that were written throughout the centuries for ceremonial
and celebratory occasions. Thus the preponderant use of the
brass and the melodic interval of the fourth, typical of this
instrumental section, though fused within a Neo-Tonal language
and techniques. The work is dedicated to the conductor Odaline
de la Martinez with grateful thanks for her moral and practical
support.
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8) - "Firelights" (1992-1993) for large orchestra is a free fantasy inspired by
various masterpieces written throughout the centuries for festive events such as
fireworks, dances, mythological stories, chimerical and wild scenes and also phantasmagoric
images and atmospheres. The work is dedicated to the conductor Fabio Mastrangelo.
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9) - "Requiescat" (1994) for large
orchestra is a freely structured musical prayer in a single
movement inspired by the spiritual aura of many famous Requiems,
but above all by the simple words of the well-known inscription
found on tombs: "Requiescat in Pace. Amen", with which it
ends. It is not a tragic work but one that reflects a more
positive attitude towards the sorrow and the longing for a
dearly departed person. Requiescat is dedicated to the memory
of Maestro Hans Keller, my spiritual enlightener and mentor,
with deepest gratitude and affection.
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10) - The "Sonata Rapsodica" for violin and piano consists of four movementsapparently typical of the classical sonata form: Allegro
Energico, Allegretto, Scherzo and Allegro Brillante. In reality none of the fourmovements are in sonata form. Each one is a free
fantasy on themes which inpart recur varied or transformed in the other movements. This freedom offantasy, obviously less formal
than in other sonatas of the more rigoroustype, justifies the title "Rapsodica". However, the proper spirit of theClassic-Romantic
Sonata remains well present throughout all the piece,though expressed with Neo-Tonal rhythms and harmonies.
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