Aletheia for mixed choir

Martinaitytė, Žibuoklė
Nimeke: Aletheia for mixed choir
Tekijät: Martinaitytė, Žibuoklė (Säveltäjä)
Tuotetunnus: 9790550118577
Tuotemuoto: Nuotti
Saatavuus: Toimitusaika 7-16 päivää
Ilmestymispäivä: 4.5.2023
Hinta: 15,60 € (14,18 € alv 0 %)

Kustantaja: Fennica Gehrman
Painos: 2023
Julkaisuvuosi: 2023
Kieli: englanti
Sivumäärä: 36
Tuoteryhmät: Teoksia naissäveltäjiltä
Kuoroteokset
Sekakuoro
Kirjastoluokka: 78.3411 Sekakuorot
Avainsanat: sekakuorot
Zibuoklė Martinaitytė tells about the background of Aletheia (no text [combinations of vowels and consonants] 2022) for mixed choir (SSSSAAAATTTTBBBB): "Aletheia is variously translated from Greek as "unconcealedness", "revealing" or "unclosedness". It is uncovering of the Truth - the one we are afraid to face, the truth that can only be expressed directly through the pre-verbal communication. How do you find words for the horrors of the war, for all unimaginable global atrocities? How do you even allow yourself to feel it out? Solely through art, through music that offer a safe space and a formalized framework for processing these accumulated complex emotions and sharing them with others in a moment. This piece has no verbal text and it is based on various combinations of vowels and consonants, thus connecting us on a deeper level through the immediate emotional experience. The work is commissioned by the Lithuanian National Radio (LRT Klasika)

The war in Ukraine in spring of 2022 had an impact on all of us and shattered my deeply rooted Lithuanian identity. When the freedom is threatened and innocent people are dying, it is hard to make sense out of the reality. Yet there is poetry even in the worst nightmares. I was imagining that the only instrument people have even in situations of destruction, in the midst of the war, is their VOICE. It brought back memories of my youth when "Singing revolution" was taking place in the Baltic countries. Human voice was the only weapon that people used to express their determination for freedom and independence. Voice is our first and the very last instrument we have in our lifetime. Thinking in these terms brings almost a sacred dimension to the voice as an expression of the life itself - from the very first baby's scream until the last breath and whisper."

Duration c. 15'

The works of New York -based Lithuanian composer Zibuoklė Martinaitytė (b. 1973) have been lauded as breathtaking and profoundly moving. Her stimulating music bristles with energy and tension and revolves often around the subject of beauty, which she calls both a guiding principle and an aesthetic measure for sonic quality.


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