Luigi 
          Nono, who died in May 1990, would have reached 
          his 80th birthday in January 2004. 
          Paradoxically, his compositions have probably 
          exerted more influence during the past decade 
          than they did throughout his career.
        
        Since 
          his death, Luigi Nono's reputation has risen 
          steadily, and not just among devotees of new 
          music. In Germany, particularly, his achievement 
          is regarded as central to compositional developments 
          since 1945, and will be celebrated accordingly 
          during 2004. There are still gaps preventing 
          a full appreciation of all aspects of his 
          career, notwithstanding some significant recent 
          recordings, and it is hoped that at least 
          some of these will soon be eliminated.
        
        One 
          area which deserves serious consideration 
          is Nono's relationship to his elder colleagues, 
          Goffredo Petrassi and especially Luigi Dallapiccola, 
          both of whose centenaries fall in 2004. Nono 
          did not study with either, but he was probably 
          influenced by their use of serial techniques, 
          and there is little doubt he sympathised with 
          many of Dallapiccola's artistic concerns. 
          Indeed, Nono dedicated one of his most important 
          transitional works of the later 1970s to Dallapiccola's 
          memory.
        
        Other 
          influences included the operas of Verdi, and 
          a substantial knowledge of renaissance polyphony, 
          obtained partly through Bruno Maderna; but 
          a more intriguing, if coincidental comparison 
          can be made with Beethoven. Both were idealists, 
          with distinct political inclinations in the 
          direction of universal brotherhood. Each was 
          fascinated by the myth of Prometheus. In Beethoven's 
          case, the myth contributed to the Eroica 
          Symphony, while it formed the basis of Nono's 
          magnum opus. Their respective careers can 
          be divided into three phases, with both achieving 
          a state of transcendence in their late works.
        
        Nono 
          studied law, as well as music, but by 1950, 
          the latter had claimed his full attention. 
          However, political engagement is rarely absent 
          from his compositions, reflecting the influence 
          of Maderna, and Hermann Scherchen. He first 
          made an impact with two ensemble pieces: Polonifica-Monodia-Ritmica, 
          and Canonic Variations. Significantly, 
          he based the latter on a tone-row used by 
          Schoenberg in his Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte. 
          Briefly, Nono and Pierre Boulez were the chief 
          protagonists at the Darmstadt Summer Courses, 
          but the advent of Karlheinz Stockhausen reduced 
          Nono's influence. Stockhausen helped to emphasise 
          the 'abstract' nature of integral serialism, 
          whereas Nono favoured concrete music, using 
          serial procedures to create dramatic, or lyrical 
          responses to poetic texts. A good example 
          is the triptych, including the flute concerto, 
          You su 
          Sangre 
          ya Viene Cantando, inspired by the poetry 
          of Federico Garcia Lorca.
        
        Despite 
          the domination Stockhausen exerted over the 
          avant-garde by the 1950s, Nono had several 
          notable successes, especially Il Canto 
          Sospeso, for soloists, chorus and orchestra, 
          which effectively brought the first phase 
          of his career to a culmination, in 1956. On 
          the one hand, the work's detailed construction 
          was in accordance with the tenets of integral 
          serialism. On the other, it fulfilled his 
          ambition of creating a powerful indictment 
          of fascism. The initial stimulus was almost 
          certainly Arnold Schoenberg's A Survivor 
          from Warsaw. Nono's response involved 
          setting texts written by inmates of Auschwitz 
          in a style ranging from intense lyricism to 
          powerful expressionism.
        
        The 
          poetry of Garcia Lorca, and other Spanish 
          writers, had already inspired Nono's engagement 
          with politics, but Il Canto Sospeso 
          was followed by an extended period during 
          which Nono concentrated almost exclusively 
          on political issues. In his 1959 Darmstadt 
          lecture, 'The presence of History in the Music 
          of Today' he outlined his compositional philosophy. 
          The main precepts were already evident in 
          his opera, Intolleranza 1960, and the 
          cantata, Canti di Vita every d'Amore, 
          for soprano, tenor and orchestra - two of 
          his more urgent statements from the early 
          1960s. Thereafter, he abandoned the traditional 
          opera house and concert hall for a number 
          of years as he sought new audiences for his 
          compositions and political ideas.
        
        The 
          1960s was a period of political turbulence 
          in Italy, and this was reflected in many artistic 
          productions. Several of Luciano Berio's finest 
          works - frequently with political overtones 
          - date from that time, and some of his contemporaries 
          equated compositional radicalism with political 
          radicalism. Thus Nono created an extended 
          sequence of politically inspired scores directed 
          primarily at industrial workers.
        
        Apart 
          from the short orchestral piece, Per Bastiana: 
          The East is Red, he favoured performances 
          in factory canteens, workers' clubs, schools, 
          etc. Electronically generated sounds played 
          a major role, involving frequent collaborations 
          with the sound technician, Marino Zuccheri. 
          Not only could tape compositions, either with, 
          or without 'live' soloists, be presented in 
          small venues but they could incorporate sound 
          material drawn from different working environments.
        
        For 
          instance, the tape for La Fabrica Illuminata, 
          for voice and electronics, was compiled from 
          the sounds of a metal foundry, while Contrapunto 
          Dialettico alla Mente, for vocal soloists, 
          chorus and tape, included sounds recorded 
          in a Venetian market, as well as references 
          to the Venetian renaissance composer, Adriano 
          Banchieri. At the same time, Ricorda Cosa 
          ti Hanno Fatto in Auschwitz, for soprano, 
          children's choir and tape, extended the concept 
          of the 'campo sonore', or 'field of sound' 
          Nono had developed in his previous choral 
          writing.
        
        Luigi 
          Nono's political pieces have often been regarded 
          as little more than propaganda, but besides 
          pioneering new electronic techniques, they 
          explored the phonetic basis of language. As 
          such, they have never been more topical than 
          today. Nono returned to the concert arena 
          in 1972 with one of his finest achievements: 
          Como una Ola de Fuerza you Luz, for 
          solo soprano, small chorus, solo piano, orchestra 
          and tape. It was dedicated to the memory of 
          the Chilean revolutionary, Luciano Cruz, and 
          demonstrated Nono's continuing political commitment, 
          despite the failure of the 1968 uprisings.
        
        The 
          same was true of Nono's second opera, Also 
          Gran Sole, Carico 
          D'Amore, 
          reflecting the history of the Paris Commune, 
          in 1871. This proved to be a work of transition 
          at a time of considerable cultural and political 
          change. The post-war avant-garde had largely 
          dissipated, and Marxism had been discredited. 
          Several aspects of the opera already pointed 
          to the final phase of Nono's career, but the 
          decisive change began with .. Sofferte 
          onde Serene .. for piano and electronics.
        
        Sofferte 
          onde Serene was the first work in which 
          Nono used electronics to analyse the sounds 
          of a single instrument, thereby prefiguring 
          his activities at the Freiburg Experimentalstudio. 
          Equally important was the Hoelderlin-inspired 
          String Quartet, Fragmente-Stille, an 
          Diotima. 
          Besides the political appeal of Hoelderlin's 
          late verse for many left-wing intellectuals, 
          his poetry provided Nono with a key to an 
          understanding of the German-speaking cultural 
          tradition. However, the unique achievements 
          of Nono's final years in Freiburg were ultimately 
          made possible by two further collaborations.
        
        Luigi 
          Nono was remarkably adept at choosing the 
          most appropriate collaborators for each compositional 
          project, and by 1981, he had established the 
          colleagues with whom he would create his magnum 
          opus: Prometeo, a Tragedy of Listening. 
          The Italian writer and philosopher, Massimo 
          Cacciari began compiling collages of various 
          texts on which Nono could draw as required. 
          The composer was also introduced to the Experimentalstudio, 
          and its Director, Hans-Peter Haller.
        
        The 
          Freiburg Experimentalstudio of the Heinrich 
          Strobel Foundation of South-West German Radio 
          quickly acquired a formidable reputation for 
          its work with many composers, but, during 
          the 1980s, its relationship with Luigi Nono 
          was unique. Nono recognised that the ideas 
          he had adumbrated in Fragmente-Stille, 
          especially the interplay between sound and 
          silence, could be extended by means of the 
          new electroacoustic technology. The transformation 
          of even the most delicate sounds and their 
          spatial distribution in real time introduced 
          a new compositional dimension.
        
        All 
          the works Nono completed during the first 
          half of the 1980s, beginning with Io, Frammento 
          da Prometeo, for bass flute, contrabass 
          clarinet, small chorus and 'live' electronics, 
          were essentially satellites of Promoteo 
          itself. They not only presented a new sound-world, 
          but contributed to the originality of Nono's 
          new concept of music-theatre. 
        
        Prometeo 
          was first performed in 1984. Its texts were 
          based on various interpretations of the ancient 
          myth of the eternal wanderer, but the intelligibility 
          of the words was less significant, since in 
          music it was the sound of words that was of 
          prime importance. Similarly, Nono conceived 
          music-theatre as a sonic landscape; accordingly 
          Prometeo was subdivided into 'islands' 
          of slowly changing performing and listening 
          activity.
        
        Nono 
          regarded Prometheus' wanderings as symbolising 
          an essential aspect of the human condition, 
          not least his own wanderings and searchings 
          in the world of sound. Hence, the metaphor 
          of wandering, or travelling, remained central 
          to his output, and was reinforced by an inscription 
          he encountered in Toledo: 'Pilgrim: there 
          is no pathway, there is only travelling itself'.
        
        During 
          the second half of the 1980s, Nono undertook 
          many projects, some of which were left unfinished. 
          Yet the Toledo inscription gave rise to several 
          completed scores which testified to the fact 
          that he retained his creative powers despite 
          failing health. No Hay Caminos, Hay Que 
          Caminar, for orchestra; Caminantes 
          ... Ayacucho, for orchestra, chorus and 
          electronics; Hay Que Caminar Sonando, 
          for two violins continued his quest for a 
          new way of listening, in which timbres were 
          combined at the threshold of audibility.
        
        However, 
          the supreme achievement of Nono's last years 
          was La 
          Lontananza 
          Nostalgica Utopica Futura, for solo violin, 
          'live' electronics, eight-channel tape and 
          eight to ten music-stands. Described as a 
          Madrigal for several 'travellers' with Gidon 
          Kremer, it alludes to the polyphony of late 
          renaissance Italy. In keeping with its title, 
          it also attempts to encapsulate elements of 
          the past, present and even future into a single 
          entity, particularly as regards the re-application 
          of fragments, or concepts from his earlier 
          output. It has already received three commercial 
          recordings.
        
        As usual, 
          the work grew from a project: this time involving 
          a collaboration between Nono and the violinist, 
          Gidon Kremer. At the same time, it was the 
          culmination of Nono's quest for a music of 
          pure sound, which would dispense with conventional 
          notions of time and space. He assembled a 
          tape lasting 61 minutes, the basis of which 
          was Kremer playing anything that came to mind. 
          The violin sounds were then combined with 
          fragments which had been transformed, electronically, 
          plus extraneous material produced in the studio.
        
        In performance, 
          the six sections of the solo part are distributed 
          on music-stands positioned at random around 
          the acoustic space, leaving the violinist 
          to devise the path he or she will traverse. 
          Similarly, the sound director chooses the 
          material that emanates from the loudspeakers. 
          The two performers can react to each other's 
          material, and their interaction determines 
          the form and character of each interpretation.
        
        La 
          Lontananza was conceived as a work of 
          music-theatre, based on the Toledo inscription, 
          and not simply as a piece of 'absolute' music. 
          This undoubtedly helps to explain its communicative 
          power. Its title also confirms that it encapsulates 
          many of the compositional objectives Nono 
          pursued for decades, ultimately proposing 
          an essentially metaphysical response to the 
          intellectual challenge posed by the collapse 
          of Marxist ideology. Nevertheless, it should 
          be stressed that Nono's approach had nothing 
          in common with the quasi-liturgical rituals 
          frequently, but misguidedly endowed with the 
          epithet 'metaphysical'.
        
        Indeed, 
          the consistency and integrity of Nono's oeuvre 
          has enhanced his reputation as possibly the 
          most significant composer of the post-war 
          generation. This is likely to be reinforced 
          by the various events planned to mark what 
          would have been his 80th birthday, especially 
          in Germany, where several pupils and close 
          associates have upheld his legacy. Apart from 
          the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, 
          British audiences have had few chances to 
          experience Nono's music in 'live' performances. 
          2004 would seem to be an appropriate year 
          for British concert planners and music broadcasters 
          to accord Nono's scores the recognition they 
          enjoy in the rest of Europe.
        John Warnaby