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“…Your son is leaving. He won’t be able to hear the bells of freedom”, wrote Konstantinos Sirbos in a farewell letter hours before his murder by the Nazis. Luigi Nono chose this and other similar letters as the basis for his work Il canto sospeso (“Floating chant”).
At the work’s opening, Nono uses floating orchestral sounds to draw the audience in before the choir sings the first episode. “I’m dying for justice. Our ideas will win”, wrote a young man from Bulgaria. In the next episode, the three soloists simultaneously sing the words of three different Greek patriots. At the climax of the piece, Nono uses lines written by a condemned woman describing moment the Nazis came to execute her, with the music moving from heart-rending brass and timpani to a contrasting, stark string accompaniment. The soprano soloist then sings words of farewell from a young Russian woman to her mother, accompanied by the hums of the women in the choir and a selection of high instruments. The piece ends with the choir singing the words “I’m leaving, having faith in a better life for you”, with only timpani accompanying. Nono connects each cryptic text fragment with instrumental Intermezzi, creating an atmosphere of farewell, desperation, and bewilderment around the listener.
“…Your son is leaving. He won’t be able to hear the bells of freedom”, wrote Konstantinos Sirbos in a farewell letter hours before his murder by the Nazis. Luigi Nono chose this and other similar letters as the basis for his work Il canto sospeso (“Floating chant”).
At the work’s opening, Nono uses floating orchestral sounds to draw the audience in before the choir sings the first episode. “I’m dying for justice. Our ideas will win”, wrote a young man from Bulgaria. In the next episode, the three soloists simultaneously sing the words of three different Greek patriots. At the climax of the piece, Nono uses lines written by a condemned woman describing moment the Nazis came to execute her, with the music moving from heart-rending brass and timpani to a contrasting, stark string accompaniment. The soprano soloist then sings words of farewell from a young Russian woman to her mother, accompanied by the hums of the women in the choir and a selection of high instruments. The piece ends with the choir singing the words “I’m leaving, having faith in a better life for you”, with only timpani accompanying. Nono connects each cryptic text fragment with instrumental Intermezzi, creating an atmosphere of farewell, desperation, and bewilderment around the listener.
Luigi Nono: Il canto sospeso (1956) camera iphone 8 plus apk | |
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Music "Il canto sospeso" for Soprano, Contralto and Tenor Solo, Mixed Chorus and Orchestra: Sofia, Zentralgefängnis 22. Juli 1942 "Il canto sospeso" for Soprano, Contralto and Tenor Solo, Mixed Chorus and Orchestra: Meine lieben Eltern! - Die Tore öffnen sich - Leb wohl, Mutter - Lieber Onkel! - Nach wenigen Stunden - Mein lieber Kamerad! "Il canto sospeso" for Soprano, Contralto and Tenor Solo, Mixed Chorus and Orchestra: I. Orchestra "Il canto sospeso" for Soprano, Contralto and Tenor Solo, Mixed Chorus and Orchestra: II. Coro a capella "...muoio per un mondo" "Il canto sospeso" for Soprano, Contralto and Tenor Solo, Mixed Chorus and Orchestra: IV. Orchestra "Il canto sospeso" for Soprano, Contralto and Tenor Solo, Mixed Chorus and Orchestra: VI. Coro e orchestra a) "...le porto s'aprono" "Il canto sospeso" for Soprano, Contralto and Tenor Solo, Mixed Chorus and Orchestra: VII. Soprano solo, coro femminile e orch "..addio mamma" | Upload TimePublished on 2 Sep 2019 |
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