TENUTA DELLO SCOMPIGLIO AT 19.30
1 DECEMBER 2018
Vox Psychopompi
sounds, variationsi and transfigurations
on the theme of death
Anonymous
O virgo splendens
Jacob van Eyck (1590-1657)
Doen Daphne d’over
Stefano Landi (1587-1639)
Passacaglia della vita
Raffaele Schiavo (1966-)
E-Motive Mantras n. 8
Giovanni Stefani (beginning 17th Century)
Amante felice
Claude Debussy (1862-1918)
Sonata for flute, viola and harp
Pastorale - Interlude - Finale
Alessandra Bellino (1970-)
Variations-invention for flutes (in C and in G) for violin, harp and piano
on the theme of Derde, Doen Daphne d'over taken from Der Fluyten Lust-hof by Jacob van Eyck
Raffaele Schiavo
Tenebrae factae sunt
François Couperin (1668-1733)
Les Barricades Mystérieuses per pianoforte
Tarquinio Merula (1595-1660)
Canzonetta sopra a la nanna
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Raffaele Schiavo voice
Ensemble Dissonanzen
Tommaso Rossi recorder and flute
Francesco Solombrino violin and viola
Ciro Longobardi piano
Lucia Bova harp
Ugo Di Giovanni archlute
photo credits: Piero Previti
In this concert, the theme of death is dealt with through the extraordinary voice of the singer Raffaele Schiavo, a multifaceted personality who combines his activity as a performer in various musical genres with that of a music therapist involved in the world of palliative care and end of life. The Sicilian singer comes together with the Ensemble Dissonanzen, the Neapolitan polyhedric group that has been journeying on a path through contemporary music for 25 years, as well as bringing music together with other arts. Out of this comes a programme suspended between ancient music and a modern contemporary repertoire, in which the theme of death is combined with that of variation and transfiguration. The baroque Stefano Landi, Tarquinio Merula, Giovanni Stefani and François Couperin join the Flemish Jacob van Eyck and the variations/metamorphoses on his melodies written by the Neapolitan composer Alessandra Bellino. The programme is completed by the Sonata for flute, viola and harp by Claude Debussy, an early twentieth-century “transfiguration” of a sonata from the era of Louis XIV, a brilliant and sophisticated reference to the great tradition of French baroque.