in Choir & Organ (Mar, 2019)
Italy’s Great War lacks the ubiquitous poetic presence of the western front, or even that of Gallipoli, but it inspired a body of writing that isn’t limited to such familiar names as Eugenio Montale and Giuseppe Ungaretti, who belonged to the ‘lost generation’ that lost its heart at Caporetto. Pier Paolo Scattolin’s Trenodia draws on an eclectic body of responses, from Penderecki’s choral music, to Ungaretti, to folk forms, to Ewart Alan Mackintosh’s ‘In Memoriam’, written in memory of a Scots (?) private killed in the German trenches. Out of such apparently inimical material, he creates an astonishing fabric of sound, stitched together by drone strings, percussion both staccato and distantly …
Pier Paolo Scattolin: Trenodia
Parodos: Prelude
Fragments: Threnody 1
Echoes: Threnody 2
Not to forget: Threnody 3
Exodus: Catharsis
Parodo: Preludio
Frammenti: Trenodia 1
Echi: Trenodia 2
Per non dimenticare: Trenodia 3
Esodo: Catarsi
Angela Beghelli, Angela Troilo, Coro Euridice, Orchestra da Camera Euridice, Ensemble Strumenti Antichi “Circe”, Pier Paolo Scattolin
19,90€
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