My Account Log in

1 option

Such a dark wood I found : Giacomo Manzoni / Gianni Di Capua, director ; Gianni Di Capua film production.

Medici.tv Available online

View online
Format:
Video
Contributor:
Di Capua, Gianni, film director.
Gianni Di Capua Film Production, production company.
Language:
English
Italian
Subjects (All):
Manzoni, Giacomo, 1932- Quanta oscura selva trovai.
Manzoni, Giacomo.
Choruses, Secular (Mixed voices) with electronics.
Choruses, Secular (Mixed voices) with trombone.
Genre:
Internet videos.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (31 min., 28 sec.)) : sound, color
Other Title:
Giacomo Manzoni
Place of Publication:
[Place of publication not identified] : Gianni Di Capua film production, [1997]
Language Note:
Italian dialogue; English subtitles.
System Details:
digital
video file
Summary:
Giacomo Manzoni on Quanta oscura selva trovai: "In the things I've written in the past, I could say that this aspect of madness often emerges, this losing control. I've set to music words that Hölderlin wrote when the madness was beginning to take over; now I'm composing something for texts by Artaud and I've composed something for texts by Nietzsche. I don't really know why but I'm fascinated, perhaps because I'm not a psychiatrist. I'm very instinctively interested in that moment when a person loses control of self, of rationality. The moment you shift from one state to another, when you lose any hold on reality and slip into madness, which may be total or only relative. In Hölderlin's case there were always ups and downs. With Nietzsche it was something devastating, as it was with Adrian Leverkühn in Doktor Faustus." "This piece is called "Quanta oscura selva trovai" ["Such a dark wood I found"]. It came into being a year and a half ago as stage music for Dante's Inferno at Ravenna where they performed the three canticas -- Paradise, Purgatory and Hell. When I approached this work I immediately realised it was an important piece and I already began to think in terms of a subsequent concert version with trombone, chorus and live electronics." "The texts are freely adapted from "Inferno." Plus some fragments of Latin prose, also by Dante, and some of his contemporaries. But it gets a little crushed in the choral and electronic whole. There's an extra dialogue recited by the trombonist himself and commented simultaneously on his trombone and this is the dialogue, again from "Inferno," giving the musician the opportunity also to be a vocal performer."
Participant:
Giacomo Manzoni.
Notes:
Vendor-supplied metadata.
Contains:
Container of: Manzoni, Giacomo, 1932- Quanta oscura selva trovai.
OCLC:
956369931
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

The Penn Libraries is committed to describing library materials using current, accurate, and responsible language. If you discover outdated or inaccurate language, please fill out this feedback form to report it and suggest alternative language.

Find

Home Release notes

My Account

Shelf Request an item Bookmarks Fines and fees Settings

Guides

Using the Find catalog Using Articles+ Using your account