Dante, Pt I “Inferno”
- Abandon Hope–
As shocking as ice, cruel as fire.
Abandon hope, thy fate is dire.
- The Selfish–stung by wasps
Shock! And Jump! No glory in you.
God, and Satan, bid Adieu.
- The Ferryman
Slow and sly, in a murk of dark
From the bleak shores go, disembark.
- Pavan of the Souls in Limbo–
Flow, and turn in garbs of purple.
The great minds churn in empty circles.
- Paolo and Francesca–the endless whirlwind
Round and round goes eternal love
Blissful and bleak, angry, beloved.
- The Gluttons–in slime
Dirt; grainy, thick and squirming
Wide eyes search for sky, never emerging
- The Suicides–the bleeding trees
Horror, branches dripping and sobbing
Flesh trapped and torn by Harpies robbing
- The Deviants–on burning sand–
Sprinting, chattering with soles boiling through.
Dancing on sunlike sand clinging as if glue
- The Fortune-tellers–facing both ways
Walking in reverse, cruel crying clowns
Lacking humor, crying anguished sounds
- The Pope’s Adagio–heads first–
Oh unfortunate Pope, dare you offend
Now into black rock with burning soles you descend
- The Hypocrites–in coats of lead
Crumple and crush with the weight of a whale
Impossible to feel or grasp, your body is your jail
- The Thieves–devoured by reptiles
Racing as a heart attack, no escape from metamorphosis.
Demons roar and laugh, your terror forms a circus.
- Satan–in the lake of ice
Tears freeze
Humanity rots.
Thomas Adés orchestral composition was first performed in 2022 by the Los Angeles Philharmonic, conducted by Gustavo Dudamel. It is split into the three canticles of the Divine Comedy; ‘Inferno,’ ‘Purgatorio,’ and ‘Paradiso.’ Adés’ ‘Inferno,’ has thirteen sections which represent key moments of the Inferno such as the nine circles and significant figures.
This is not the first time an orchestral composition about the Divine Comedy was composed. In the 19th century Franz Liszt wrote ‘A Dante Symphony.’ According to the New York Times, Adés wrote ‘Inferno’ as a love letter to Liszt, whom he referred to as ‘my Virgil.’
The composition uses a multitude of textures and colors to create the atmosphere of hell, illustrating the suffering, anguish and brutality that is experienced. I decided to write a short poem about each of the thirteen sections in order to add another layer with which to experience the music. I chose a simple rhyming couplet for each stanza so as to not take away from the music, but to make a short interjection. The thirteenth stanza purposefully does not rhyme to illustrate the simplicity and ultimate suffering that the souls of the ninth circle experience.
Caleb Anderson
Works Cited:
- Barone, Joshua. “Review: Thomas Adés Charts a Journey through Hell and Heaven.” The New York Times, 9 Apr. 2022, www.nytimes.com/2022/04/29/arts/music/ades-dante-la-phil-review.html.
- Adés, Thomas. Dante. New York, New York: Nonesuch Records, 2023
- Symphony, Dante. “Dante Symphony, S.109 / Franz Liszt [Notated Music].” Performing Arts Databases, 2022, memory.loc.gov/diglib/ihas/loc.music.ismn.52342/#:~:text=Composed%20in%201855%2D56%2C%20Liszt’s,colors%20and%20daring%20harmonic%20schemes.