Descrizione
Clamor in Latin as in Italian can have an ambivalent meaning: cry, scream, intended as a noun and as a verb in the first person singular.
This passage from the objective to the subjective dimension constitutes the poetics of the piece: the first part reveals, through aggressive and violent sound gestures and a schizophrenic texture between one and the other, the cry in its most commonly understood meaning. Slowly a tension develops, accentuated by percussive gestures that refer to a dramaturgy of waiting, turning to a climax that resolves its tension in an implosion. It draws then a silent cry immersed in an intimate and delicate atmosphere, until it leads to a transfiguration of the cello, becoming itself clamor.