Don't Choose the Nightingale: Timbre, Index, and Birdsong in Respighi's Pini di Roma

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Abstract

“I Pini del Gianicolo,” the third movement of Ottorino Respighi’s Pini di Roma (1924), is the first symphonic composition to feature a phonograph record alongside more conventional orchestral instruments, a peculiar innovation debated by both early listeners and more recent scholars. This chapter seeks to capture Respighi’s use of a pre-recorded nightingale within a wide interpretive net, considering the status of orchestration and signification in early twentieth-century instrumental and dramatic music; the medial history of Respighi’s nightingale; as well as other attempts to combine the animal, mechanical, and musical in the months around the work’s premiere. Birdsong—real, represented, and recorded—might prompt further reflection on the peculiar materiality of timbre, whose mysteries, this chapter suggests, could also be considered the subject of Respighi’s work.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Oxford Handbook of Timbre
EditorsEmily I. Dolan, Alexander Rehding
PublisherOxford University Press
Chapter19
ISBN (Print)9780190637224
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2018

Keywords

  • Respighi
  • Malipiero
  • Beatrice Harrison
  • verismo
  • program music
  • sound recording
  • indexicality
  • Orchestration
  • Pini di Roma
  • birdsong

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