sabato 14 settembre 2013

A Long Way To Go in Music & Vision 18 July



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Ensemble
A Long Way To Go
GIUSEPPE PENNISI reports from
Tunisia's El Jem Symphony Festival

Readers may remember the film The Gladiator. Very few may know, however, that it was shot not in Rome's Coliseum but in the amphitheater in El Jem, Tunisia. Even fewer will be familiar with the El Jem Symphony festival which for nearly three decades has taken place in the same amphitheater where Russell Crowe was shown fighting with other gladiators as well as wild animals. Now at its twenty eighth edition, the festival is the only one of its kind in Northern Africa and, as far as I know, in the Middle East.
Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma at the El Jem Symphony Festival. Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi
Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma at the El Jem Symphony Festival. Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi.
Click on the image for higher resolution
The amphitheater was built in the third century AD by a Roman Proconsul who had the guts to proclaim himself Emperor, only to be defeated by troops loyal to the real Emperor ruling in Rome. It was the Empire's third largest amphitheater, after Rome's Coliseum and the theatre in Capua. At its peak, it contained an audience of 34,000. The Roman city of Thysdrus went into decadence and was replaced by a Tunisian town of 18,000 inhabitants, some forty miles away from several of Tunisia's most touristic beach resorts. The amphitheater remained intact until the fourteenth century, when some of the stone was used for building houses and a Mosque. Now it is a stunning beauty, especially at sunset and at night, emerging from the middle of the small streets of a North African town.
Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma at the El Jem Symphony Festival. Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi
Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma at the El Jem Symphony Festival. Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi.
Click on the image for higher resolution
Tunisia has four conservatories and in the nearby town of Sousse there is the School of Music of the National University. Three decades ago, Tunisian musicologists proposed to the Government to start an international symphony festival for the enjoyment of the local populace as well as by tourists. Now a larger plan entails improving the National Philharmonic Society and reviving the early twentieth century art déco Tunis Opera House. A possible partner would be the Symphonic Orchestra of Rome -- the only fully private orchestra in Europe supported by a Charity -- the Fondazione Roma Arte Museo. This foundation has a branch, Fondazione Mediterraneo, especially dedicated to social and cultural development on the southern shore of the Mediterranean basin. The Tunis Italian Cultural Office is working steadily on this project, and also on the basis of the good outcome of its activities involving Italian participation in the festival.
Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma at the El Jem Symphony Festival. Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi
Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma at the El Jem Symphony Festival. Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi.
Click on the image for higher resolution
This concert season spans 29 June to 31 August, but with a long intermission during Ramadan. The Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma inaugurated the festival on 29 June 2013 and performed a second amphitheater concert on 6 July. It will also hold a concert (not in the festival program) at the Sousse School of Music. Other orchestras come to the festival from Austria, Belgium, China, Egypt, Poland and Russia. In short, it's a truly international gathering, including a special visit of the Queen Elisabeth musical cruise.
Francesco La Vecchia conducting the Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma at the El Jem Symphony Festival. Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi
Francesco La Vecchia conducting the Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma at the El Jem Symphony Festival.
Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi. Click on the image for higher resolution
I was in the impressive amphitheater on the opening night. The concert started late, at around 10pm, to be telecast live in Tunisia and nearby countries. The amphitheater was packed, mostly by Tunisians; a special train service had been arranged from the capital. Two Ministers and their retinue were in the audience (some six thousand). The program included, after the Tunisian and Italian National Anthems, Beethoven's sixth symphony and Verdi's overtures from Traviata, Nabucco and I Vespri Siciliani. Under the baton of its founder, Francesco La Vecchia, the orchestra was quite good. Everyone sensed that it was a very special evening: before the concert, there was a short firework display, and the section of the amphitheater behind the orchestra was lit with torches; other torches were carried by small balloons.
Conductor Francesco La Vecchia (left) in conversation at the El Jem Symphony Festival. Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi
Conductor Francesco La Vecchia (left) in conversation at the El Jem Symphony Festival. Photo © 2013 Antonio Tirocchi. Click on the image for higher resolution
The audience was not, of course, as familiar with Western symphonic music as, for example, that subscribing to the Vienna Musikverein series. Applause erupted after each and every movement of the Beethoven symphony, for example. At the end of the concert, which was after midnight, many expected an encore of the full program.
In short, there is still a long way to go. But music may make feasible even impossible dreams.
Copyright © 18 July 2013 Giuseppe Pennisi,
Rome,
Italy
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