Maschere is a project composed of unpublished works for solo saxophone, or for saxophone and electronic music. The idea was born out of the need of enriching the contemporary “made in Italy” repertoire for the saxophone. It is characterized by an innovative language, going side by side with the evolution of instrumental technique. The nine composers who collaborated for the realization of Maschere belong in the panorama of Italian contemporary music. Each of them has his or her own background, enriched by a continuing experimentation and musical research: for this reason, the pieces all have different features, styles and languages.
ALBERTO DI PRIOLO Being a saxophonist myself, when I write for my instrument, I feel the need to employ its idiomatic possibilities, as have been explored in the last decades, without however letting them prevail over the expressive content of music itself. In Lo!, the use of the saxophone’s extended techniques has been the direct consequence of my attempt to explore the vocal style of Jeff Buckley, so rich in diverse timbral nuances, both extremely agile and visceral at the same time. The characteristic improvisational style exhibited by that singer in his concerts, joined to the style – fixed on paper – of composer Giacinto Scelsi, have had a decisive role in channeling my personal quest towards improvised music, from which I drew in order to compose this piece. (AdP)
ORAZIO SCIORTINO Fleeting, unquiet, melancholic, a Dryad leaves the half-light of the woods, in quest of a mortal spirit with whom to unite herself. Ungraspable for her beauty, the Nymph becomes, for a composer, the generating cell of a composition. From her the panting plot germinates in an ingenerated and unending time. (OS)
ANGELO SORMANI As highlighted by the title, the piece is built on a hexatonic scale. Its principal feature is the alternation of the two hexatonic ranges contained within the interval of an octave. In the piece’s first part, these two ranges are very dilated and distinct. From the central part to the end, the alternation intensifies, almost creating a convergence; this feature acquires a fundamental meaning for the entire composition. The electronic component supports, embraces and increases the itinerary of the solo instrument. (AS)
FABIO MASSIMO CAPOGROSSO I composed Notte di Luna, in its original version for solo flute, in 2018, upon a commission by the Accademia Filarmonica Romana. The piece is inspired by the eponymous painting by Wassily Kandinsky. It attempts to evoke its colours and shades, its dreamy atmosphere, and the motifs of the Russian fairy tales living in the painter’s imagination. The foundational element of my work is the absolute freedom of performance entrusted to the player. For this reason, when Marina Notaro asked me to contribute to her project, I had no doubts as regards the choice of this piece. There are no metronomic indications or bar numbers, and the formal and expressive construction is shaped by the performer’s aesthetic sensitivity. The breathing, pauses, air, all constitute a further, non-renounceable element in the structure of this musical work of mine. (FMC)
NELLY LI PUMA The piece I dedicated to saxophonist Marina Notaro has been written with the purpose of exploring the technical and sound possibilities of the alto sax. Its title, Überlegung (“reflection”), refers to the slow moments of the piece, where intervals of an ascending or descending augmented fourth break the flow of rapid passages made of repeated notes, sound waves and randomized musical lines. (NLP))
MASSIMILIANO VIEL Diaphony. In the systems of telecommunication, recording and reproduction, this term (also known as crosstalk) indicates the interference caused by the transferred sound signal due to undesired coupling with other channels of communications. Diafonie, for alto sax, was created by reformulating a piece of 2004, i.e. the IV Fragment of Heterodyne for solo clarinet. It is the imaginary reconstruction of an electromagnetic soundscape, i.e. of what it is possible to receive with a radio in amplitude modulation (AM), tuned on medium waves. And lo, there present themselves Morse signals, noises in broadband, fragments of automated messages and other events, difficult to identify. On this sea, made of shreds of communications, unintelligible for us, a clearer signal stands out. In the clarinet version, it is identified as a message projected into infinity, in the hope that it may be received, one day, by the dedicatee. It is therefore a naturalism of the machine. Almost as happens to the blackbird who is the protagonist of Olivier Messiaen’s Merle bleu – singing in a cave facing the stormy sea – here a signal with a mysterious codex and meaning is addressed to us. It overcomes the cliffs of the interferences, and becomes, diaphonically and crosstalk-wise, from a coded message to music. (MV)
GIULIO MARAZIA My pieces by the name of Ánthēsis (Greek: flowering) are works for solo instruments, each time a different one. They have the aim of exploring all of the linguistic individualities of an instrument, the possibility of turning language into matter, the corporeality of each instrument. Musical instruments thus become characters, with whom the composer identifies himself, with his capability to observe and to shape the complexity of each aural production. Every composition is tailor-made, from the beginning, on the features of a precise performer. Ánthēsis VI for soprano sax is a long melody. Like almost all melodies, it implies redundancy, symmetries, transformations and returns. A constant transformation between two diverse intervallic fields is developed here: one is made of six notes (F, A-flat, D, B, G-sharp, A-natural), which tend to appear always in the same range, and the other is made of five notes (G, A-flat, F, D and A-natural), which instead always appear in different registers. From these two intervallic fields derives a musical cryptogram where the name of the performing dedicatee, Marina Notaro, is contained. (GM)
GIORGIO COLOMBO TACCANI Blank was originally born by combining tarógató with electronics, thanks to a commission of the German soloist Nikola Lutz. The presence of tarógató, fascinating as it is, does not promote the piece’s wide dissemination. However, counting on the great timbral affinities and on the coinciding range of the tarógató and soprano sax, I welcomed with great pleasure Marina Notaro’s proposal, i.e. to realize a second version of that piece for this new solo instrument. In a narrative plot which remains substantially unchanged, the instrumental part alternates strongly energetic parts – certainly prevailing in the course of the piece – with zones of melodic distension, at times freezing in immobile held tones. The electronic component – as is usual for me in similar situations – is derived, in a very high percentage, from samplings of tarógató, elaborated by myself employing varied techniques of treatment. The results are perfectly suited for combination with the sound of the soprano sax. (GCT))
LEONARDO MARINO The title, Breaker, has a twofold meaning. The first is nothing else than a reference to the great saxophonist Michael Brecker, and a homage to his unforgettable instrumental style. The second, instead, is bound to one of the meanings of the English word breaker, i.e. hammer. The rhythmical and insistent repetition of the note D brings this image back to one’s mind; it thus realizes a dynamic background in which are set the varied figures, of a jazz derivation. The piece is to be played and listened “in a single breath”, in order to better appreciate the vortex of tension characterizing it. (LM)