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Giuseppe Bruno - Roberto Scarcella Perino: Sonatas & Piano Music (2019)

Giuseppe Bruno - Roberto Scarcella Perino: Sonatas & Piano Music (2019)

BAND/ARTIST: Giuseppe Bruno

  • Title: Roberto Scarcella Perino: Sonatas & Piano Music
  • Year Of Release: 2019
  • Label: Da Vinci Classics
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 74:06 min
  • Total Size: 232 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Sonata No. 1: I. Moderato
02. Sonata No. 1: II. Andante
03. Sonata No. 1: III. Tarantella:Rondò
04. Sonata No. 2: I. Allegro birbante
05. Sonata No. 2: II. Come una romanza
06. Sonata No. 2: III. Tema con variazioni
07. Sonata No. 3: I. Allegro ma non troppo
08. Sonata No. 3: II. Valzerino
09. Sonata No. 3: III. Vivacissimamente
10. Sonata No. 4: I. Allegretto
11. Sonata No. 4: II. Berceuse
12. Sonata No. 4: III. Allegro Danzante
13. Metamorfosi
14. Ninna Nanna per Giorgio
15. 12 Variazioni su Ciuri Ciuri
16. Constellations: Prologue
17. Constellations: Ursa Maior and Ursa Minor
18. Constellations: Draco
19. Constellations: Cassiopeia
20. Constellations: Cygnus
21. Constellations: Delphinus
22. Constellations: Lyra
23. Constellations: Aquila
24. Constellations: Orion
25. Constellations: Pegasus
26. Constellations: Pleiades
27. Constellations: Finale


Roberto Scarcella Perino has composed four piano sonatas. Although they have some elements in common each of them has got an identity of its own. Unlike many composers of the second half of the twentieth century, Roberto views music as a communicative and theatrical art that must employ traditional classical-romantic musical forms. In this regard, the use of the sonata form (present in all initial movements), the liedform (prevalent in the intermediate pieces), the rondo or the variations is fundamental, and easily identifiable.
However, although these forms are traditional, Roberto’s ideas are always expressed in a very personal style, and the result is never banal or easily predictable.
Like Shostakovich or Prokof’ev, he uses classical forms to convey an emotional, sometimes very intimate, content.
What I always point out when I am asked to give my opinion on his music is that Roberto is not afraid of expressing feelings. I come from Liguria, where there is a common tendency to be very discreet, and for a person of my origin this is what makes him most admirable.
The First Sonata is the one I am personally most fond of, partly because I performed it several times in three different countries. The memory of Sonia Pahor, who was Roberto’s teacher and an excellent pianist, is the prevailing emotional trait in the sweet Moderato, but also in the Andante that is a real sound watercolor. The final Tarantella/Rondò reflects Roberto’s origins and his memories of Sicily, where he spent his youth.
The Second Sonata is dedicated to Patrizia di Carrobio. Its rhythmic language is almost American in the Allegro Birbante, while Quasi una romanza is the second most articulated movement you find in the four sonatas, with a stormy central part. The concluding Tema con variazioni is clear evidence of Roberto’s capability of hiding a rhythmic construction that goes progressively from a 3-bar to a 9-bar meter without detaching itself from the original theme. The 12 Variazioni su Ciuri Ciuri had already testified to Roberto’s skill in writing variations.
The Third Sonata, dedicated to Stefano Albertini, is certainly the most ambitious one. The first half, Allegro ma non troppo, is complex and contains a fugue with a decidedly jazz theme. The second movement is a veiled Valzerino that helps ease the tension. It is almost a tribute to Rota and the traditional dances on an outdoor platform. In the Vivacissimamente the pianist is confronted with a tour de force written by the composer in a virtuoso manner and with no sign of shyness. Roberto is particularly gifted in giving a leading role to the performer instead of treating him or her as a machine to produce sounds, as has all too often been the case in recent years.
The Fourth Sonata is dedicated to Brian Fahey. In my opinion this is very similar to the First Sonata: the Allegretto has a comparable structure but is shorter and more compact. The delicate Berceuse is, to quote Roberto, a Yoga class: a moment of meditation and almost a suspension of time. In the Allegro danzante dances appear again, interspersed with a “promenade” that evokes memories of Mussorgsky. These dances are not Italian but Irish, in homage to the origins of the person this piece of music was dedicated to. There is room for virtuosity but not as significantly as in the Third Sonata where it almost conjures up Listz: here it is lighter and more relaxed, and very often reminds listeners of the use of violin in Celtic music.
Metamorfosi is inspired to a Sicilian legend “Colapesce”, the story of a boy named Cola who moves into a merman to live happily into the sea.
Ninna Nanna per Giorgio is a lullaby written when Roberto’s nephew was born.
Ciuri Ciuri (in Sicilian “flowers, flowers”) may be Sicily’s most famous folk song. Here it is the theme for a parody of the music of such composers as Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin, and Liszt. Its virtuosic writing was a kind of spiteful salute to all the difficult measures I had to study during my years at the Conservatory.
Commissioned by Adirondack Repertory Dance Theater (ARDT), the last part of the CD is dedicated to a cycle of pieces dedicated to the summer Constellations. Each piece is a musical reading of the stars, as notes on a score.

Album Notes by Giuseppe Bruno


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