MORGEN; 10 final - choreography: Nacho Duato, music: Pedro Alcalde and Richard Strauss op27/4

Choreographer: Nacho Duato Music: Pedro Alcalde end of : Richard Strauss Morgen , nr. 4: for Clarinet, Violoncello and Marimba - orch. Pedro Alcalde Set, Costumes: Nacho Duato Lighting: Nicolás Fischtel (.) Clarinet: Joan Enric Lluna Cello: Erica Wise Percussion: “Percussions de Barcelona”: Robert Armengol, Miquel Vich, Núria Andorrà, Riccardo Massari Spiritini (Tarcordium) Voice: Molly Malcolm Musical recording and mastering: Ferran Conangla, Sergio Sotelo Premiered by the Compañía Nacional de Danza (CND) 25-02-2022: Palacio de Festivales de Cantabria, Santander 03-10-2022: Video, premiere at Teatro Real, Madrid Performed in Spain, Germany, Colombia and Uruguay Morgen is a ballet on Dorothy Parker’s 1926 poem entitled Resumé. The poem consists of 8 short verses. The first 7 refer to the drawbacks of 7 different ways of committing suicide and the eighth and last suggests that another option could be to live. Morgen (“tomorrow” in German) is also the title of a song by Richard Strauss (op. 27, nr. 4) with which the ballet concludes, both for its intrinsic beauty, as for the content of hope from its text. The semicolon refers to the tattoo and subsequent project to help people who have survived a suicide attempt. : “A semicolon is used when an author could’ve chosen to end their sentence but chose not to. The author is you, and the sentence is your life.” During the composition process, the different sections dedicated to the first seven verses of the poem moved away, abstracting from the order established by the verses, in order to attend directly to the atmosphere, they epitomize. The minor second and descending chromatic fourth intervals, the emblematic elements of the baroque “doctrine of the affections” to represent lament, mourning and death, appear in each of the different sections. The use of different forms of ostinati has the function of producing a sensation of processional movement, in the manner of a peculiar musical exequies.
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