PALUMBO Woven Lights

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Vito Palumbo

Genre:

Orchestral

Label: BIS

Media Format: Super Audio CD

Media Runtime: 58

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: BIS2625

BIS2625. PALUMBO Woven Lights

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Violin Concerto Vito Palumbo, Composer
Francesco D'Orazio, Violin
Lee Reynolds, Conductor
London Symphony Orchestra
Vito Palumbo, Composer
Chaconne Vito Palumbo, Composer
Francesco Abbrescia, Electronics
Francesco D'Orazio, Violin

If Italian new music seems a rather less adventurous place now than in previous decades, the emergence of composers such as Vito Palumbo (b1972) at the very least suggests a willingness to deploy the advances of earlier generations towards more euphonious if often equivocal ends.

Cast in a single movement of around 30 minutes, the Violin Concerto (2015) starts out with sepulchral stirrings that gradually open out texturally and dynamically on to an evocative backdrop for the soloist to pursue a mainly lyrical and often imaginative discourse. While the violin is very much first among equals across what unfolds, its contribution stands out owing to the fastidiousness of Palumbo’s orchestration; notably during those later stages (of a piece in several arc-like sections) when other instruments come briefly if tellingly to the fore to extend the music’s expressive remit. A final and evidently defining climax precedes its dying down towards the musing and even mystical serenity with which this work closes.

Francesco D’Orazio is the assured soloist both here and in Chaconne (2019 20), its scoring with electronics testament to the scrupulousness by which Palumbo approaches the medium. In the initial ‘Woven Lights’, a five-string electric violin is heard in the context of sampled sounds whose gestural immediacy decreases as these are drawn into a sonic continuum as unpredictable as it is imaginative. A long and often plangent cadenza makes way for ‘The Glows in the Dark’, the violin now surrounded by 30 pre recorded variants of itself as this music assumes a rarefied while also capricious quality typified by tangible weightlessness.

Francesco Abbrescia has realised the electronics with audible sensitivity, and the London Symphony Orchestra respond with equal finesse to the astute conducting of Lee Reynolds. Warmly recommended, not merely to anyone who feels nostalgia for those distant ‘future utopias’.

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