Guido Barbieri
text and narrating voice
Margherita Cappelletto
“La voce del Tempo”
Silvia Paparelli
piano
Federico Martusciello
live electronics
Program
Johann Sebastian Bach
Sinfonia n. 7 BWV 793
Roberta Vacca
Seven (world premiere)
Dark Sun (world premiere)
TiBi reloaded (world premiere)
George Frideric Handel
Sarabanda della Suite in re minore n. 4 per clavicembalo (HWV 437)
Ludwig van Beethoven
Adagio sostenuto dalla Sonata op. 27 n. 2
Who invented time? Who started measuring it? And who taught us to give it a meaning, a direction, an end? According to Giorgio de Santillana, one of the 20th century’s greatest historians of science, Hamlet is entirely to blame. Not Shakespeare’s mad and melancholic hero, to tell the truth, but his much more ancient progenitor, Amleth, the ‘true’ prince of Denmark recounted in the middle ages by Saxo Grammaticus. From his Gesta Danorum we learn that Amleth owns a mill, a prodigious mill that grinds flour day and night, ensuring food and prosperity for all the subjects of the kingdom. But when the prince’s uncle, Fengi, kills his father, Orvedil, the land of Denmark falls into chaos and the enchanted mill begins to grind only sand. It is the prelude to catastrophe: the country plunges into a dramatic famine, while at court only the winds of revenge blow. The mill, the symbol of all misfortune, is thrown into the sea, but its blades continue to whirl and create a gigantic whirlpool, the Maelström whirlpool, the nightmare of all sailors venturing into the northern seas.
As de Santillana argues in his study, Hamlet’s Mill, the parable of the prince of Denmark narrated by Saxo is not a simple literary myth, but one of the oldest and most refined representations of the structure of time, present, in different forms, in all the cultures of the world, from East to West. The mill wheel is none other than the disc of the sun, the symbol of life and prosperity, observed, since time immemorial, in its incessant circular motion. And the catastrophe that strikes the kingdom of Amleth is the representation of one of the astronomical anomalies that ancient science has always recorded with precision: the so-called precession of the equinoxes. This is the phenomenon according to which the equinox, the arc of time in which night and day have exactly the same duration, does not always fall at exactly the same time of year, but rather slightly earlier each time, following a very long astronomical cycle (the so-called Platonic year) that lasts about twenty-five thousand years. This is a consequence of the inclination of the earth’s axis, which is, in turn, the cause, as is well-known, of the changing of the seasons. Ancient thought has always identified this anomaly, this irregularity in the circular flow of time, as the cause of the catastrophes that have always struck planet Earth: earthquakes, floods, famines, and wars. A wedge is driven into the mill wheel, in short, an imperfect cog in the circular machine of the sun.
The ambition of BHB – Hamlet’s descent into the Maelström is to recount the phenomenon of the birth of time and its innumerable crises, aporias, and anomalies through the concentric and simultaneous instruments of musical storytelling, mythical narration, and scientific demonstration. The performance is built around three concentric circles, one inscribed inside the other. The innermost circle, the solid and incandescent core, consists of the musical plot designed by Roberta Vacca and performed by Silvia Paparelli. At the “center of the center” are three monuments of western keyboard literature, Johann Sebastian Bach’s Symphony No. 7 for three voices, the Sarabande from the Suite in D minor No. 4 by Georg Frederich Händel, and the first movement of Ludwig van Beethoven’s Sonata Op. 27 No. 2, on which the composer, like the sun’s turn on the ever-changing ecliptic surface, engraves her writing, changing the vision, the acoustic image, the sound perception. And on which the electronic auras of Federico Martusciello also rest, in a sort of return to the square. The outermost circle is occupied by the narration, entrusted to the voice of Guido Barbieri, of the myth of Hamlet, his mill, the invention of time, and its cyclical crisis. The last ring, the outermost, but perhaps, in reality, the central one, is the presence of a historian of science, who, at crucial junctures in the story, illustrates and clarifies, from a live perspective, the scientific foundations of the astronomical phenomena that determine our conception of time.
The modern version of Hamlet’s myth, the one we have adopted, however, contains a further anomaly. Devoured by the will for revenge, powerless to observe the whirlpool of the Maelström generated by his sunken mill, Amleth’s plunges, like the protagonist of Edgar Alan Poe’s tale inspired by the same myth, into the depths of the sea. And he seems destined to perish along with his perfect machine. He will be saved, thanks to the acuity of his scientific observation, but after his descent into the Maelström, the world and his time will no longer be the same as before. Amleth will forever lose the innocence of the time, his faith in its irregular and continuous motion, and will be gripped by anguish at the unpredictable anomalies that accompany his path. The same anguish that, at the end of the day, is that of the time in which we live.
Guido Barbieri
Guido Barbieri, per vent’anni critico musicale del quotidiano La Repubblica Guido Barbieri scrive oggi per le pagine culturali de Il Manifesto. Dal 1980 voce storica di Radio 3 si dedica principalmente, senza trascurare il lavoro di storico della musica, alla drammaturgia musicale. Ha scritto testi, libretti e readings destinati ad alcuni dei maggiori compositori italiani. Ha condiviso il palcoscenico, sostenendo spesso il ruolo di voce narrante e recitante, con i migliori musicisti, attori e registi della scena italiana. Si dedica anche, pur senza farne una professione, alla pratica della direzione artistica. Tiene conferenze e scrive programmi di sala per le più importanti istituzioni musicali italiane.
Roberta Vacca, pianista e compositrice, docente presso il Conservatorio “A. Casella” di L’Aquila, dove ha compiuto anche i suoi studi musicali, oltre l’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia e l’Accademia Chigiana. Vincitrice di numerosi premi e riconoscimenti Nazionali e Internazionali, compositrice residente presso Mac Dowell Colony (U.S.A.), Fondazione per le Lettere e per le Arti di Bogliasco e Residenza d’Artista “Le Ville Matte”, ha al suo attivo diversi lavori (pubblicati da Ars Publica, MEP, RAI Com, Sconfinarte, Twilight), eseguiti in Italia e all’estero, presenti in cinque monografie e raccolte discografiche di varie etichette.
Silvia Paparelli, pianista e musicologa, è dal 2001 docente di Storia ed Estetica della Musica presso l’Istituto superiore di Studi musicali “G. Briccialdi” di Terni. Ha suonato per le maggiori istituzioni italiane (I Concerti del Quirinale – in diretta radiofonica europea – Teatro Comunale e Amici della Musica di Modena, Associazione Scarlatti di Napoli, Bologna Festival, Ravello Festival, Festival di Nuova Consonanza, Sagra Musicale Umbra, Festival di Parma, Accademia Filarmonica Romana, Società Barattelli L’Aquila), in Europa (Francia, Germania, Spagna, Norvegia, Polonia, Slovacchia, Estonia, Lituania, Ucraina, Lettonia, Ungheria, Malta) ed estremo oriente. Ha partecipato a numerosissime prime esecuzioni assolute, registrazioni discografiche e RAI.
Federico Martusciello, compositore, artista sonoro e studioso delle tecnologie della musica. Nel 2012 abbandona gli studi musicali classici per dedicarsi alla musica elettronica e alle tecnologie del suono. Dal 2014 s’interessa alle tematiche relative alla soundscape composition. Nel 2018 è finalista al XIV Premio delle Arti (Sez. Musica Elettronica e N.T) con il brano Ricostruzione. Dal 2018 si dedica alla ricerca e al censimento dei luoghi del silenzio in Abruzzo e nel 2019 si diploma in Musica elettronica a indirizzo compositivo (A. Di Scipio) presso il Conservatorio A. Casella de L’Aquila. Dal 2021 è membro del Forum Klanglandschaft (FKL) e nello stesso anno viene selezionato come relatore nel simposio internazionale Unheard Landscape a Blois.
Margherita Cappelletto, laureata in Astronomia e Astrofisica alla Sapienza, Università di Roma, Margherita Cappelletto lavora come tecnologo presso il Dipartimento Scienze del Sistema Terra e Tecnologie per l’Ambiente del Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche dove si occupa di cooperazione scientifica internazionale, prevalentemente nell’ambito delle scienze marine. Dopo aver conseguito il Master in Comunicazione della Scienza alla SISSA di Trieste ha portato avanti numerose attività di divulgazione e disseminazione scientifica. Tra i suoi progetti, ideati in collaborazione con le coreografe Evelin Facchini e Meritxell Campos Olivé, Scienza in Danza, un laboratorio di giochi coreografici pensato per coinvolgere il pubblico in performance a carattere scientifico, e il documentario artistico Surfing Einstein.
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Artistic Direction
Anna Leonardi
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