Chiesa di San Giacomo 13 June 2019 - Kathinkas Gesang als Luzifers Requiem | GoComGo.com

Kathinkas Gesang als Luzifers Requiem

Chiesa di San Giacomo, Forlì, Italy
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9 PM
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Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Forlì, Italy
Starts at: 21:00
Duration:

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Festival

Ravenna Festival 2019

Ravenna is located on north central Italy, in Emilia-Romagna County. The city holds two music and opera festivals. The first and the longer one  takes place between mid June till mid July and the second  the shorter one is held in November.

Programme
Karlheinz Stockhausen: Kathinkas Gesang als Luzifers Requiem
Iannis Xenakis: Psappha
Giacinto Scelsi: I funerali di Achille
Karlheinz Stockhausen: Vibra Elufa
Karlheinz Stockhausen: Kathinkas Gesang
Overview

in collaboration with Accademia Musicale Chigiana

Over a quarter of a century, from 1978 to 2003, Karlheinz Stockhausen wrote the 16 hours of music (extendible to 29) of Licht – Die sieben Tage der Woche (The Seven Days of the Week), seven works associated to each day of the week and each one of the seven planets of the ancient age, structured through the relationships of only three characters: Lucifer, Michael, and Eve. It is a symbolic world connecting the daily and eternal life, myths and religions of the Western and Eastern worlds. It is, above all, a challenge to the passing time. Stockhausen also meant to challenge the Day (something he did with Klang, stopping at the 21st hour though), then the Hour, the Minute, and even the Second. The song of Kathinka belongs to Saturday, the day of Saturn, therefore Lucifer’s: a shift toward the Light. In this piece, the function of the song is to protect the dead souls from temptations, through – as Stockhausen himself explained – “musical exercises to listen to regularly for 49 days after the physical death”. Likewise Vibra Elufa is taken as an independent work from the last scene of Friday, representing the temptation of Eve by Lucifer. Licht can be described as a great music rite, just like Giacinto Scelsi’s I funerali di Achille (1962); the composer “officiated” the funerals of Alexander the Great and Charlemagne as well, and preferred to describe himself as an “intermediary” rather than the creator of his own pieces. Also Iannis Xenakis’s Psappha (1975) – the ancient name of poetess Sappho – is permeated by a masculine and archaic ritualistic power: it is built on 2.396 segments that take the place of the traditional musical notation, creating rhythmic cells that bridle both the performer and the audience in a joined participation without any chance to flee.

Venue Info

Chiesa di San Giacomo - Forlì
Location   Piazza G. da Montefeltro

When they were established and became widespread, in the first decades of the thirteenth century, the Mendicant Orders reinstated the complex relationship between the Church and municipal cities.

This is the case of the Dominicans, who in Forlì were known to promote faith and culture, thanks also to religious and popular leading figures such as Blessed Salomoni and Blessed Marcolino. Their activities were the cornerstones to the large Convent and church, dedicated to the Apostle James – small and simple at first with a three nave hall, three aisles, and two chapels in the apse. The bell tower was already where you see it now. After the death of Blessed Salomoni a chapel dedicated to him was added, close to the northern facade of the hall. Then the church remained a perennial open construction site. At the end of the fifteenth century the hall was renewed and four aisles were added. The original three-part space was modified into one single nave. This was evidence of the ever increasing role of the Dominicans. In the same period the Convent was rebuilt as well. During the Renaissance and Baroque period the church was beautifully adorned with decorations and furniture. The interior changed in appearance but not in structure. In the eighteenth century new construction works commenced, bringing the church to its current condition. The hall was enlarged, the façade withdrawn, a wider and monumental apse was built, and the side chapels were “homogenised”. The church was then opened for worship even during Napoleon’s rule but, in 1867, with the final abolition of the Orders by the Italian State, it was closed, stripped, and turned into military stables. Thus began a period of gradual decline, culminating in the abandonment and collapse of part of the roof and the southern façade in 1978. It was only during the nineties that the Town started the gradual recovery process leading to its full restoration. Today it is part of the Museums of St. Dominique, which also hold the municipal Art Gallery and extraordinary temporary exhibits; the Complex also includes Palazzo Pasquali, the Dominican Monastery, the convent of the Augustinians, and St. Catherine’s hall.

Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Forlì, Italy
Starts at: 21:00
Duration:
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