Logo: takte
Das Bärenreiter Magazin
  • Portrait
  • Music Theatre
  • Orchestra
  • Contemp. Music
  • Complete Ed.
  • Publications
  • Calendar
  • Contact

Deutsch wechsle zu deutsch

Funeral rites. Andrea Lorenzo Scartazzini encounters Gustav Mahler

Andrea Lorenzo Scartazzini

Torso – Epitaph for chorus (ad lib.) and orchestra

First performance: 26.5.2019 Jena, Jena Philharmonic, conductor: Simon Gaudenz (in collaboration with the Sinfonieorchester Basel)

Scoring: 3 (3 doubling picc),3,3 3 – 4,3 (3 doubling trp-picc),3,1 – timp,perc(3) – hp – str – chorus SATB

Publisher: Bärenreiter, BA 11186, performance material available on hire

Over several years the Swiss composer has complemented the Jena Philharmonic’s Mahler cycle with his own companion pieces. For each concert Scartazzini has written a symphonic movement, and with each Mahler performance these new movements join together to form a large-scale orchestral work. The beginning was Torso in October 2018. Like this, Epitaph also draws on a lyric text by Rainer Maria Rilke.

Andrea Lorenzo Scartazzini: “Epitaph begins with nothing, instead begins at the high point of the preceding piece Torso, so that the power which has built up over its long intensification is now fully unfolded with great boosts of energy.

Whilst the music of Torso grew slowly like a living organism and increasingly enveloped the entire orchestra, during the course of the second piece this process gradually turns round, the strength diminishes, and the music assumes more and more the character of a lament. Hence it approaches the expressive realm of Mahler’s 2nd ‘Resurrection’ Symphony, particularly its 1st movement, which Mahler himself described as a ‘funeral rite’. Epitaph is therefore a work about death. Finally it flows into an enigmatic sound space, in which the chorus haltingly recites three verses by Rilke, like an inscription on a gravestone. ‘For we are only the shell and the leaf. / The great death, which everyone has in himself, / that is the fruit around which everything revolves.’”

MLM
(from “[t]akte” 1/2019)

<- Back to: Contemp. Music

Deutsch wechsle zu deutsch

Contemporary music

Fragility transformed into sound. A new vocal work by Beat Furrer
On the way to a beautiful sound. In memoriam Thomas Daniel Schlee
Fundamental human experiences. “Earth” by Andrea Lorenzo Scartazzini
The dreams of childhood. Ľubica Čekovská’s “Toy Procession” for Houston
The Cantata “Do Not Retreat!” and the “Jewish Prayer” by Miloslav Kabeláč
Deadly Encounters. Miroslav Srnka’s new opera “Voice Killer”
Transformations of piano sound. Beat Furrer’s Piano Concerto no. 2
Of wood and angels of lizards. Beat Furrer’s opera “DAS GROSSE FEUER” for Zurich
“Uncalculatedly beautiful”: Cassandra Miller
No templates! Dieter Ammann’s Viola Concerto for Nils Mönkemeyer
Looking beyond his own horizons. Philipp Maintz is “Composer in Focus” in Aachen
On the 100th anniversary of Giselher Klebe’s birth
Surface tension. Introducing Lisa Lillean
The orchestra plays the main role. Bruno Mantovani’s opera “Voyage d’automne”
A visionary view. Beat Furrer’s 70th birthday
ImprintData Protection