Form, fi gure, and the experience of time in seven southern composers of the 1950s-60s

dc.contributor.authorVallauri, Stefano Lombardi
dc.date.accessioned2013-12-02T08:54:54Z
dc.date.available2013-12-02T08:54:54Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.description.abstractAfter the 1980s it is diffi cult, following stylistic criteria, to draw a map of contemporary academic music. All styles are compossible, and all are practiced. In this context, the geographical entity “South of Italy” does not stand out for a musical identity with special technical-stylistic features. Rather, at a socio-cultural level, the South remains today – in music no less than in all areas where there is a gap between top development and stagnation – a land of emigrants: six out of the seven composers treated (Ivan Fedele, Giuseppe Colardo, Rosario Mirigliano, Giuseppe Soccio, Nicola Cisternino, Biagio Putignano, Paolo Aralla) live in the North of Italy. The positive aspect of this is the affi nity of the South with the transnational and superstructural community of contemporary music, which from European and Western has now become almost global. The composers under consideration belong to the generation of the ‘50s, rooted in the serial and post-serial movements (from which Franco Donatoni, Luciano Berio, Luigi Nono, Salvatore Sciarrino, Giacinto Scelsi, are the principals models, to mention only the Italians), dipped in the general phenomenon of timbrism (particularly spectralism), and acquainted with electronics. They draw from these sources various instruments of compositional technique and aspects of their poetics. In particular these composers, active from the ‘80s, develop new ways of construction of the temporal form of music. They share the goal to establish a new continuity, different from the tonal one but at the same time transcending the serial and post-serial disintegration and fragmentation. The primary means to this end is a new enhancement of the category of fi gure, as a clear and distinct, recognizable aggregate of pitches, intervals, register, durations, timbre, articulation, dynamics, and texture. Each composer elaborates the atonal fi gural material in different ways, emphasizing one aspect or another. For example, Fedele (1953) is a master in the management of form per se, Colardo (1953) in the activation of disturbed harmonic effects, Mirigliano (1950) in the creation of a slight tension from the smallest vibrations of sound, Soccio (1950) in the set up of movement by means of accumulations and discharges of energy, Cisternino (1957) in a Cagean-Scelsian emphasis on sound as such, Putignano (1960) in the suspension of time through the succession and transformation of images, Aralla (1960) in the foundation of form from below, from the concreteness of sound.pl_PL
dc.identifier.citationInterdisciplinary Studies in Musicology 12, 2012, pp. 91-106.pl_PL
dc.identifier.issn1734-2406
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10593/8668
dc.language.isoenpl_PL
dc.publisherKatedra Muzykologii, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PTPN, Wydawnictwo Naukowe UAMpl_PL
dc.subjectpost-serialpl_PL
dc.subjectatonalitypl_PL
dc.subjectcontinuitypl_PL
dc.subjectIvan Fedelepl_PL
dc.subjectGiuseppe Colardopl_PL
dc.subjectRosario Miriglianopl_PL
dc.subjectGiuseppe Socciopl_PL
dc.subjectNicola Cisterninopl_PL
dc.subjectBiagio Putignanopl_PL
dc.subjectPaolo Arallapl_PL
dc.titleForm, fi gure, and the experience of time in seven southern composers of the 1950s-60spl_PL
dc.typeArtykułpl_PL

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Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
Biblioteka Uniwersytetu im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
Ministerstwo Nauki i Szkolnictwa Wyższego