
Media
Score

About
Instrumentation
fl/sax/vox/pno/vl/vla/vlc/cb
Commissioned by
Ensemble Mêtis
Dedicated to
Premiere
Alternative Stage of the Greek National Opera of Athens, May 23, 2026
Computer Music Designer
Publisher
Important Note
Programme Note
Dialog is the first part of a triptych inspired by Collapse, a poem by the American poet Claudia Rankine. This intimate and fragmentary text forms the poetic and emotional starting point of the work. It evokes an inner collapse, a tension between what resists and what falls apart, between the awareness of the body and the possibility of rebirth.
The piece is also shaped by the powerful visual world of Francis Bacon, whose distorted figures, suspended between flesh, violence, and solitude, have nourished the sonic imagination of the work. As in Bacon’s paintings, Dialog seeks to reveal a fragile, unstable human presence, at times almost dissolved, caught in a space where the contours of the body and identity begin to waver.
At the centre of the piece lies an inner dialogue: that of a figure with its shadow. The countertenor embodies this dialogue vocally, acting at once as character, memory, and double of himself. His voice unfolds in a stream of consciousness in which breath, timbre, inflection, and physical tension become the true materials of the musical discourse. The voice does not merely narrate: it experiences, cracks, and resists.
Through the emotional states suggested by the text — collapse, resistance, and inner transformation — the music explores a territory between illusion and reality. The instruments extend, displace, and transform the vocal material, as though each sound were the echo of an inner perception or a sensory memory.
Dialog invites the listener into an intimate, unstable, and sensitive space-time, where music becomes the site of a confrontation with the self: a dialogue between presence and disappearance, between vulnerability and strength, between what collapses and what, despite everything, continues to seek a form of life.
Collapse
The collapse is within the life within.
There remains no real antidote
to the collapse except to collapse
without coming apart while coming apart.
The heart aches. Before another step,
absorb the texture of whatever is touched
when one touches down. The heart breaks.
Break up the muted call with its fractured o,
texture of whatever is touched
when one touches down. It’s never just
the hard familiar hit of ground.
There’s texture in whatever is touched
when one touches down. Resist
the frantic desire to undo our moment.
Resist the fear of one’s weight falling
into the texture of whatever is touched
when one touches down, even if
the whatever is whomever is touched,
all our selves broken apart,
all our vowels lost to consonants,
the r’s raging war, rousing the quiet
sinking a body’s want to rise up. Rise up.
Claudia Rankine

