I have done a few posts on Luigi Nono (1924 - 1990) here on the blog, but I was far from doing a complete survey of his life and works. Intolleranza 1960 is the first of his three stage works and the most overtly political. The message is a fairly simple one: fascism is bad, oppression is bad, torture is bad and so on. What saves the work and makes it not seem so tied to the political events of the day such as the colonial war in Algeria (one of the characters is Algerian) is the surprisingly lyrical musical elements and poetical elements from Paul Eluard and Bertholt Brecht in the libretto.
The stage is full of characters: five solo singers, one of whom has to do a surprising amount of acrobatic dancing as well as a challenging vocal part, sixty chorus members who do a great deal of physical movement as well, and twenty or so dancers who are in constant frenetic motion throughout. Apart from the eighty or so orchestra players in the pit, fifteen percussionists are divided between a balcony at the back of the stage on the left and another small balcony in front of the stage on the right.
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2 comments:
I recently read a description of an earlier performance of this opera "Intolleranza 1960" that made me think it might be tedious and I wondered if you'd review it badly, but to my surprise you find redeeming qualities in it. Nono, a composer whose music I've never even heard.
Many years ago I had an LP of one of Nono's orchestral works (with a political theme) the title of which I have forgotten. But at the time I thought it was passionate music. I did a few posts on Nono several months ago here.
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