Whose voices? The fate of Luigi Nono’s 'Voci destroying muros'

Luigi Nono's Voci destroying muros for female voices and small orchestra was performed for the first and only time at the Holland Festival in 1970. A setting of texts by female prisoners and factory workers, it marks a sharp stylistic departure from Nono's political music of the 1960s by v...

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Main Author: Adlington, Robert
Format: Article
Published: University of California Press 2016
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31016/
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author Adlington, Robert
author_facet Adlington, Robert
author_sort Adlington, Robert
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
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description Luigi Nono's Voci destroying muros for female voices and small orchestra was performed for the first and only time at the Holland Festival in 1970. A setting of texts by female prisoners and factory workers, it marks a sharp stylistic departure from Nono's political music of the 1960s by virtue of its audible quotations of revolutionary songs, its readily intelligible text setting, and especially its retention of the diatonic structure of the song on which the piece is based, the communist “Internationale.” Nono's decision, following the premiere, to withdraw the work from his catalogue suggests that he came to regard it as transgressing an important boundary in his engagement with “current reality.” I examine the work and its withdrawal in the context of discourses within the Italian left in the 1960s that accused the intellectuals of the Partito Comunista Italiano of unhelpfully mediating the class struggle. Nono's contentious reading of Antonio Gramsci, offered as justification for his avant-garde compositional style, certainly provided fuel for this critique. But Voci destroying muros suggests receptivity on the part of the composer—albeit only momentary—to achieving a more direct representation of the voices of the dispossessed.
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spelling nottingham-310162020-05-04T20:04:56Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31016/ Whose voices? The fate of Luigi Nono’s 'Voci destroying muros' Adlington, Robert Luigi Nono's Voci destroying muros for female voices and small orchestra was performed for the first and only time at the Holland Festival in 1970. A setting of texts by female prisoners and factory workers, it marks a sharp stylistic departure from Nono's political music of the 1960s by virtue of its audible quotations of revolutionary songs, its readily intelligible text setting, and especially its retention of the diatonic structure of the song on which the piece is based, the communist “Internationale.” Nono's decision, following the premiere, to withdraw the work from his catalogue suggests that he came to regard it as transgressing an important boundary in his engagement with “current reality.” I examine the work and its withdrawal in the context of discourses within the Italian left in the 1960s that accused the intellectuals of the Partito Comunista Italiano of unhelpfully mediating the class struggle. Nono's contentious reading of Antonio Gramsci, offered as justification for his avant-garde compositional style, certainly provided fuel for this critique. But Voci destroying muros suggests receptivity on the part of the composer—albeit only momentary—to achieving a more direct representation of the voices of the dispossessed. University of California Press 2016 Article PeerReviewed Adlington, Robert (2016) Whose voices? The fate of Luigi Nono’s 'Voci destroying muros'. Journal of the American Musicological Society, 69 (1). pp. 179-236. ISSN 1547-3848 Luigi Nono; Antonio Gramsci; communism; realism; voice http://jams.ucpress.edu/content/69/1/179 doi:10.1525/jams.2016.69.1.179 doi:10.1525/jams.2016.69.1.179
spellingShingle Luigi Nono; Antonio Gramsci; communism; realism; voice
Adlington, Robert
Whose voices? The fate of Luigi Nono’s 'Voci destroying muros'
title Whose voices? The fate of Luigi Nono’s 'Voci destroying muros'
title_full Whose voices? The fate of Luigi Nono’s 'Voci destroying muros'
title_fullStr Whose voices? The fate of Luigi Nono’s 'Voci destroying muros'
title_full_unstemmed Whose voices? The fate of Luigi Nono’s 'Voci destroying muros'
title_short Whose voices? The fate of Luigi Nono’s 'Voci destroying muros'
title_sort whose voices? the fate of luigi nono’s 'voci destroying muros'
topic Luigi Nono; Antonio Gramsci; communism; realism; voice
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31016/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31016/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31016/