Filippo Zapponi - Hypérion-Éos - for Bassoon and Electronics HD

19.02.2012
The new version (2010-2011) of Hypérion-Éos is written for Jeffrey Lyman who premiered it at Britton Recital Hall - University of Michigan. The first version (2009) was premiered at Ircam in Paris. Studio recording: Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Bassoon : Jeffrey Lyman Original format: 24 bit - Quadraphonic Hypérion-Éos is a meditation on two poems of Hölderlin: Hyperions Schicksalslied and Der Frühling. The first and the second sections, “Hypérion I-II” – the name evokes one of the titans of Greek Mythology – are articulated via three different “moments”: a leap toward the heights, a somber cry and a slow descent. The figure of Stockhausen is evoked through a short reworked fragment from one of his compositions. The third section, “Éos” – “dawn” in ancient Greek and also the mythic daughter of Hyperion – symbolizes the desire to rise, a new light, a young sky that carries a profound peace. The slow and serene rising turns of the solo instrument radiate a superhuman calm, becoming at times almost expressive. The phrases unfold from a single core where sound and silence complement each other in perfect equilibrium. Near the end, on the surface of the slow ascending chant emerges a recomposed fragment of a very early piece of ancient Greek music dating from 2400 years ago. Hypérion-Éos is entirely developed from a synthetic and unifying “musical symbol” split into two parts, according to the dual nature of the piece. Despite their apparent antithetical nature, the two parts share subtle structural affinities. In several passages, both in the electronics and in solo instrument part, identical laws rule time (durations) and “metaphorical” pitch space. Pitches and durations are therefore directly proportional. The electronics erect the “walls of sound” that are bent by the solo instrument, and create an aura, a chiaroscuro around the bassoon sounds through different strategies of re-synthesis (using Max/MSP, Iana and CataRT). The sections of Hypérion-Éos, while having been generated by the same materials, have significantly different lengths, creating a sloping and open form. In each of the two sections there lies a spark – a brief appearance – of the other: an attempt at balance.

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