By way of illustration of the manner in which the
different signifiers outlined above can be
combined in practice, I move now to a brief examination
of three compositions selected from the oeuvre of some of
the groups already mentioned. While in each case
the overall treatment results in a style which can be
seen to be characteristic of a particular
phase of the group in question, these
examples are at the same time representative of broader
trends and processes (9).
(i) Les Nouvelles Polyphonies Corses:
Giramondu
- The opening track of Les Nouvelles Polyphonies
Corses first eponymous disc (Philips,
1991), is the song that was also chosen to open
the 1992 Winter Olympics at Albertville and was
subsequently used in a Philips advertisement
which appeared world-wide. The song (by
Patrizia Poli and Patrizia Gattaceca) features
the voices of Poli and Gattaceca themselves,
joined by Jean-Paul Poletti and other singers
from the Scola di Cantu of Sartène which Poletti
directs (10). The
instrumental component here consists of
electronics by Hector Zazou.
The song features the basic
arrangement of three voices found in the
indigenous paghjella which operate within
established structural parameters: the opening
motive is in the solo secunda voice which is then
joined for the completion of each line by a solo terza
and a bassu which is here reinforced by
several male voices; the latter two parts enter
on the fifth degree of the scale and the tonic
respectively, against the third degree in the secunda
voice; the secunda remains within the compass of
a fifth, while the terza uses the third,
fourth and fifth degrees of the scale
- resolving onto the characteristic tierce
de picardie with a slightly flattened major
third - and the bassu the root
notes of chords I, IV and V. The timbres of
the voices and the melismatic treatment of the secunda
and terza lines are also recognisably
traditional. For the brief
chorus, all three voices enter into parallel
movement, a procedure familiar from its use in
parts of the traditional sacred repertoire.
For the second stanza, a higher contra-terza
is added which uses the upper tonic as its point
of reference and also introduces the leading
note, so bringing the piece into a more
western or tonal frame of
reference. (The addition of such a contra-terza
is now a relatively widespread, albeit contested,
practice).
Les Nouvelles Polyphonies
Corses: Giramondu (mp3 file, 315 kb, 0.13 min)
- As in other pieces on the same disc, the airy and
expansive nature of the improvised
electroacoustic backdrop is redolent of the sense
of openness and wider horizons to which the song
makes reference both literally and symbolically,
reflecting the rhetoric which invokes a global
frame of reference with its promise of a shared
humanity. This contrasts sharply with the
solid, earthy qualities of the voices with their
specific echoes of ancient times. The vocal
and instrumental components respectively can thus
be seen to be iconic of the local and the global,
past and present, providing an acoustic image of
the place of ancient roots in a contemporary
environment, of Corsicas place in the wider
world. The text itself talks of the loss of
the self to the world of nature - in
this case a specifically Corsican landscape
referenced by images of ferns, a chestnut tree
and the tolling of a bell - and to
the spirits which animate the natural world and
keep the earth turning.
(ii) I Muvrini: A
Sculuccia
- This song appears on the disc Noi (Columbia,
1993) and, like the majority of songs on the
album, features a solo voice with instrumental
accompaniment. As in the Nouvelles
Polyphonies example discussed above, the
traditional signifiers are again carried by the
voice while the modern or contemporary signifiers
are carried by the instrumentation. The
songs on the disc as a whole can be divided into
two broad categories: one rhythmic and upbeat,
clearly related to the indigenous chanson style
of the 1970s but also aligning itself with the
Anglo-American pop aesthetic through the
employment of a drum kit; the other characterised
by a greater metrical freedom, a more declamatory
and melismatic style of delivery, and less
conventional instrumentation. A
Sculuccia belongs in the latter group.
As in most of the groups
output, the vocal idiom approximates quite
closely that of traditional singers, retaining a
number of characteristic elements in the realm of
melodic structure, vocal color and
ornamentation. The stanza is sung to a
single melostrophe - based on
the pentachord - whose descending
contour with its terraced structure is
reminiscent of traditional monodic songs, as is
the high density of melisma or
modulation in the voice.
Meanwhile, the relatively sophisticated
instrumental score with its heavy reliance on
synthesized sounds together with the unusual
combination of hurdy-gurdy and cetera belongs to
the ethos of the early 1990s. In contrast
to the treatment of the nouvelles polyphonies,
however, where the instrumental component is
improvised and superimposed over the voices at a
later stage, the instrumental lines here have a
more composed nature, forming an intrinsic part
of the piece in providing support for, and
interacting with, the voice. More
modern harmonies are implied in the instrumental
accompaniment while the pervasive electronic
presence denotes technological sophistication and
mastery over the medium.
I Muvrini: A Sculuccia (mp3 file, 315 kb, 0.13 min)
- The text itself is firmly rooted in the island
and its concerns and belongs to a thread running
throughout I Muvrinis oeuvre
concerned with the process of neglect which the
island has suffered in modern times and in
particular the much-debated problem of the
desertification of the interior. The
present lyric follows in a well-established
tradition of laments for the forgotten places and
discarded artefacts of the old way of life,
focusing here on the fate of a village school
whose classrooms now stand empty, the only memory
of the children who once filled them and played
in the now overgrown garden outside being the
graffiti carved into the old wooden
benches.
(iii) Cinqui Sú: Ma Da Chi
Saraghju Natu?
- Featured on the disc Comí Acqua Linda (Ricordu,
1994), this is an example of the type of
song that blends references to both the chanson
and the traditional polyphonic idiom and that
might be referred to in Corsica itself as a
chanson in polyphony.
Thematically, it belongs in the tradition of the
new post-nationalist anthems to Corsica. In
the lyric, the Corsican people speak of the
sleepless nights of their troubled past, their
pride in their birthright, and their desire only
to live in freedom in their homeland while
wishing peace to all mankind.
The piece begins with an
elaborate instrumental section lasting over a
minute and a half and also serving as the
backdrop for a portion of spoken text. The
first stanza of the song itself is sung by the
three voices a cappella. For the second
stanza a plucked guitar is introduced. For
the remaining stanzas the accompaniment becomes
far busier, more rhythmic and more prominent with
the addition of a darabuka and small bells
and the shift to strummed chords on the
guitar. The opening line of each stanza is
sung by the secunda alone, which is then
joined by the bass and terza for the
remainder of the stanza.
Cinqui Sò: Ma Dà Chi Saraghju
Natu? (mp3
file, 267 kb, 0.11 min)
- As in the traditional canon, the secunda line
draws on limited melodic material, the same
melody line (which occupies the range of a
pentachord) being repeated for each of the four
lines that make up the stanza and also for the
first and third lines of the refrain. An
element of variety and tension is introduced by
means of a diatonic modulation at the beginning
of the refrain whose final line then returns to
the original tonality. The treatment of the
text is essentially syllabic, as in the
traditional monodic song and the chanson, with a
similarly logical correlation between the textual
and musical lines (in distinction to the paghjella
style, which is more melismatic and
ecstatic, resulting in considerable
obfuscation of the text). The bass voice
here does not have the functional harmonic role
of the paghjellas bassu but
is rather centered around a drone on the
tonic. (The secunda, unusually, does
not ever descend to the tonic but instead treats
the 3rd degree of the scale as an implied
tonic.) A greater sense of
polyphony is given by the way in
which the bass and secunda occasionally sing two
different lines of text against one another (the
bass repeating the second line of the stanza
while the secunda sings the third).
The interrelationship of the secunda and
bass remains, however, essentially
homophonic. The conception of the terza
voice - which enters with a
drone-like incantation, in this case on the upper
tonic, before moving into a descending figure to
finally resolve onto the fifth degree of the
scale in thirds with the secunda
- is more evocative of the paghjella
style, particularly in its melismatic style of
delivery and in the way in which the melismatic
figure at the end of the second line is extended
to create an overlap with the new line in the secunda.
It is this terza line that creates the
sense of a more polyphonic texture overall. While
the strummed guitar and darabuka give the
impression of anchoring the vocal component in
terms of both rhythmic regularity and tonality,
any attempt to bring the voices into conformity
with a more western or
modern aesthetic is ultimately
subverted by the freedom exerted by the terza
through its melismatic behaviour which pulls it
out of the framework of the equal tempered scale
on the one hand and of metrical symmetry on the
other. In this case, then, the tension
between traditional and modern is found within
the vocal arrangement as well as in the
juxtaposition of voices and instruments.
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