MARCO POLO (French text) for Fanfare
Musical tale for Narrator and Concert Band. This work was inspired by the well known book "The Travels of Marco Polo", written by Rustichello da Pisa at the end of XIII century. The setting is both for concert band and fanfare, requiring a narrative voice which tells the tale. The storyteller may perform the play in four different languages (Italian, French, English and German). About 30 images are available on request, to be projected during the show.
Composer
Antonio Rossi
Arranger
-
level
3
duration
90'00
formation
Fanfare
Publisher
Scomegna Edizioni Musicali
format
Full score and parts A4+ (24 x 32 cm)
Product Code
ES FFR1484.31A
Contains
1. Le voyage 2. À la cour du Grand Khan
Recorded on the CD
Description
Marco Polo (Venice, 1254), son of Venetian merchants, left in 1271 with his father Niccolò and his uncle Matteo, towards the distant China at the court of the Mongol emperor Kublai Khan. The long journey, which lasted three and a half years, led the Polos to cross Turkey, Central Asia, the Pamir, and the Gobi desert. The intelligence of the young Marco and his curiosity towards new customs and languages raises the interest of the emperor so much that he decides to keep him at his court by appointing him ambassador. This assignment takes him to newly conquered southern China and other parts of southern Asia. In 1292, the Great Kublai Khan agrees, albeit reluctantly, to let him go. Marco, after 17 years at his service, can finally return to Venice, but not before completing a last mission for the Grand Khan: accompanying his niece, Princess Kokachin, to Persia, where she would marry. A few years after his arrival in Venice, Marco finds himself involved in a naval battle against the Genoese people in which the Venetians are defeated. Consequently, Marco is captured and taken to prison in Genoa. There, he meets the storyteller Rustichello da Pisa to whom he tells the story of his adventurous journey. After his release, Marco returned to Venice and led a comfortable life until his death in 1324.
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