Through the depth of sound and expressive possibilities of the baroque string quartet, Come bianca luce (As white light) evokes the emotions and feelings aroused by the vision of white light and its surprising chromatic variations: from the welcoming, soft and reassuring tone of warm light to the silent, icy and sharp white of cold light.
From a formal point of view, the work has the following structure: A, B, C, A’. The harmonic language is based on the continuous expansion and loosening of tonality through the use of quartal and quintal harmony and dissonant notes.
The piece is inspired by verses from the “Divine Comedy” by Dante Alighieri (“Paradiso”, canto I, vv. 1-9, 64-72 and canto XXXIII, vv. 121-145), in which light plays a very important role. The piece is dedicated to the people who are victims of war and terrorism, because white, a symbol of purity, peace, spirituality and eternity, represents our hope for the future and trust in others.
Through the depth of sound and expressive possibilities of the baroque string quartet, Come bianca luce (As white light) evokes the emotions and feelings aroused by the vision of white light and its surprising chromatic variations: from the welcoming, soft and reassuring tone of warm light to the silent, icy and sharp white of cold light.
From a formal point of view, the work has the following structure: A, B, C, A’. The harmonic language is based on the continuous expansion and loosening of tonality through the use of quartal and quintal harmony and dissonant notes.
The piece is inspired by verses from the “Divine Comedy” by Dante Alighieri (“Paradiso”, canto I, vv. 1-9, 64-72 and canto XXXIII, vv. 121-145), in which light plays a very important role. The piece is dedicated to the people who are victims of war and terrorism, because white, a symbol of purity, peace, spirituality and eternity, represents our hope for the future and trust in others.