Joy for the Soul
GIUSEPPE PENNISI visits
Sagra Musicale Umbra
As mentioned in previous years' coverage (eg 'To the Glory of God', 14 September 2011), Sagra Musicale Umbra is the oldest music festival in Italy (literally 'A Local Feast'). It has special features when compared with any other European festival, and provides a ten day journey (15-25 September 2013) through an entire region where it combines the beauty of landscape, monuments and art with few parallels anywhere. Another feature is the very strong local participation, being financed almost entirely locally (and privately). Private estates are open to the general audience for concerts and, sometimes, owners offer bountiful buffet dinners when the musical entertainment has finished. The integration between music, on the one hand, and various forms of visual art, on the other, has always been an essential element.
Traditionally, the Sagra Musicale Umbra is a festival of 'spiritual' music. This does not mean that it is a festival of religious, sacred or Roman Catholic music. The intention is to offer, in St Francis' region, music dealing with themes that talk to the soul. The 2010 edition was named Pilgrimages of the Soul because the nine days of concerts were in nine different localities. In 2011 the name was From the old world to the new -- a tribute to Francesco Siciliani (for fifty years musical director and the real driver of the Sagra). The 2012 edition was called Angels and Demons -- a clear confrontation. This year the title, and the main theme, is Transfiguration.
I visited the Sagra for three days and could get a sample and a taste of its activities. Here I review three concerts. In a later article, two offerings of operatic music. Of the three concerts, the most important (especially for an international audience) was the 21 September 2013 afternoon celebration of his own eightieth birthday by a towering figure of contemporary music, Krzysztof Penderecki. The Polish composer and director, a close friend of both Lech Walesa and Karol Wojtyla, became so internationally known since the mid-Sixties that he could afford considerable freedom to work abroad. He is a practicing devout Roman Catholic and decided that his birthday concert would be held in a place normally not accessible to either the general public or tourists: the cloister of St Francis Basilica. Penderecki is a living monument to contemporary music in a long journey through the second half of the twentieth century and the first decades of the twenty first century. He composed choral works and music for film, stage and theatre. More fundamentally, he witnessed the decline of the Second Viennese School (the twelve note row system) and of the complex Darmstadt and IRCAM experiments, arriving at a pluralistic post-romantic musical language with echoes of baroque and even ancient music.
Nearly an hour from Assisi is the small village of San Gemini, with a well-known source of mineral water and a Roman Abbey dating back some thousand years. In the Abbey at 9pm on the evening of 21 September, the German Ensemble Amarcord (Wolfram and Martin Lattke, Frank Ozimek, Daniel Knaut and Holker Krause) travelled, without any instrumental support, from the Middle Ages to contemporary religious music: Gregorian chant, vocal pieces by Hildegard von Bingen, Thomas Tallis, Sixt Dietrich, Pierre de la Rue until John Tavener and Marcus Botho Ludwig. The listeners experienced a strong feeling of unity and continuity across the centuries and between the different kinds (Roman Catholic, Lutheran) of Christian music.
Copyright © 29 September 2013 Giuseppe Pennisi,
Rome, Italy
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