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Carissimo/a,quello che vedrai è un lavoro a quattro mani che ho realizzatocon l’aiuto di mio figlio Joshua, assai più esperto di me in fattodi musica!!!E’ un viaggio nel mondo incantato di una delle più belle poesiedel Romanticismo inglese attraverso le incantevoli immaginidel pittore francese Gustave Dorè (1832 – 1888), illustratoredi straordinario valore di opere memorabili come la DivinaCommedia, per approdare alla versione musicale degli IronMaiden che, con la loro musica travolgente, contribuiscono afar conoscere e apprezzare opere letterarie immortali.Buon divertimento!Silvia Mazzau

Silvia Mazzau &Joshua Giardini

Which elements characterise a ballad? Four-line stanzas An archaic language The use of alliterations. onomatopoeias and repetitions The combination of dialogue and narration The theme of travel The presence of supernatural elementsWhat does a Romantic ballad add to them? The presence of a moral at the end. and a modern-day ballad sung by aHeavy Metal band?

PART I«It is an ancient Mariner,and he stoppeth one of three»An ancient Marinermeets three weddingguests.He stops one of the three:his choice is not a casualone.He starts telling him astory.Illustrations by Gustave Dore (1877)

«The Wedding-Guest sat on a stone:he cannot choose but hear»The wedding guest isannoyed: he has to hurryto the wedding party.The Ancient Mariner holdshim with his hand and withhis glittering eye: the manis spellbound and cannotmove.The Mariner begins to tellhis story.

«The bride hath paced into thehall,red as a rose is she»In the meantime thewedding party is goingon: the bride and thebridegroom are there,and the musicians areplaying.

«And now the storm blast came,and he was tyrannous and strong»The mariner tells theyoung man of how at firsthe sailed southwardsto the equator with agood wind and fairweather.But a storm soon led theship to the South Pole.

«The ice was here,the ice was there,the ice was all around»The ship was soonsurrounded by ice.It was extremely cold,no sound was heard,only the cracking ofthe ice.

«At length did cross an Albatross,thorough the fog it came»One day, unexpectedly, analbatross came through thefog, as if it had been sent byGod.At that point, a good windstarted blowing and theship was driven towards theNorth.

«In mist or cloud,on mast or shroud,it perched for vespers nine»The albatross wouldoften come and perchon the ship, to playand get food fromthe mariners.

«“God save thee, ancient Mariner!From the fiends that plague theethus! Why look’st thou so?” –With my cross-bowI shot the albatross.»Suddenly the ancient Marinerkilled the albatross with hiscross-bow.Why?

PART II«And I had done a hellish thing,And it would work 'em woe».The Ancient Mariner realizes hehas killed a bird of good omen.At first the crew blame themariner for killing the albatross,then they justify him, becausethey have a favourable wind:this attitude will make them coresponsible for the crime.

«And water, water, every where,Nor any drop to drink»Suddenly, the ship stops moving:no more wind nor breeze.Everything around the ship issad and silent. The sun is hotand the mariners are thirsty:they are surrounded by waterbut they have none to drink.

«About, about, in reel and rout,The death-fires danced at night»The crew can see slimy beingsin the water as well as deathfires all around.The atmosphere is hellish andfrightening.

«Nine fathom deep he had followed usFrom the land of mist and snow.»The shipmates are convincedthat an Evil spirit is following them.It is a sort of curse after the killingof the albatross.The ancient mariner ispunished by his crew: they hangthe albatross around his neck.

PART III«A spect, a mist, a shape, I wish!And still it neared and neared.»After many days of droughtand thirst the crew can see aship in the distance.They have a flash of joy, butsoon realize that a phantomship is approaching.It is the skeleton of a ship andher sails look like cobwebs

«"The game is done! I've won, I've won!"quoth she, and whistles thrice.»On the phantom ship there aretwo horrible female figures:and.They throw dice to win the lives ofthe mariners:gets the crew.wins the AncientMariner

«Each turned his facewith a ghastly pang,And cursed me with his eye.»One by one all the mariners die,except for the Ancient Mariner.No sighs nor groans are heard:the Ancient Mariner can only seea curse on their faces.

PART IV«And never a saint took pity onmy soul in agony.»The Ancient Mariner tellsthe Wedding Guest abouthis horrible punishment:he was alone and desperatein the open sea, his menlying dead around him.

«And a thousand thousand slimy thingsLived on; and so did I.I looked upon the rotting sea,And drew my eyes away.»Everything around him looksrotten: the sea and the deadmen.He dislikes the creatures ofthe sea and cannot even pray:he feels an outcast, isolatedfrom mankind, from God,from Nature.

«Seven days, seven nights,I saw that curse,And yet I could not die.»Although his men are dead,the expression on theirfaces, their open eyes cursinghim haunt him.He wishes he were dead.

«The moving Moon went up the sky.»The Ancient Mariner gazes atthe moon and the stars: undertheir consolatory light a changebegins to take place.

«Beyond the shadow of the ship,I watched the water-snakes»The mariner starts seeingthe sea creatures in adifferent way: he admirestheir shining colours and afeeling of love enters hissoul.He blesses the sea creaturesand the spell begins to break:the Albatross falls into thesea and sinks.

PART VThe process of the soul’s revival continues: the Mariner isallowed to sleep and awakes to the sound of the falling rainso he can drink at last.All the dead men suddenly stand and go about their jobs asa mute, ghostly crew. The ship starts sailing again.PART VIThe process of healing seems to slow down: the penance hasto continue.Suddenly, the shore appears on the horizon: crimson shapesbegin to rise from the water in front of the ship and the Marinersees an angel standing over each dead man's corpse.The angels wave their hands silently, serving as beacons toguide the ship into port.

PART VII«“O shrieve me, shrieve me, holy man!”The Hermit crossed his brow.“Say quick,” quoth he,“I bid thee saywhat manner of man art thou?”»The mariner is picked up by asailor, his son, and a hermit,and the mariner's ship sinks.The hermit saves the marinerfrom his sins, but as aconsequence for killing thealbatross, he must spread themessage of love for all God'screatures.

The last lines.«“Farewell, farewell! but this I tellto thee, thou Wedding Guest!He prayeth well, who loveth wellboth man and bird and beast.He prayeth best, who loveth bestall things both great and small;for the dear God who loveth us,He made and loveth all”.The Mariner whose eye is bright,whose beard with age is hoar,is gone: and now the Wedding Guestturned from the bridegroom’s door.He went like one that hath been stunned,and is of sense forlorn:a sadder and a wiser man,he rose the morrow morn.»hoar whitestunned shocked, surprisedforlorn sad, unhappy

Rime of the Ancient Marineris a song by Iron Maiden, anEnglish heavy metal band fromLeyton in east London, formedin 1975 by bassist and primarysongwriter Steve Harris.It is a musical re-telling of S.T.Coleridge’s lyrical ballad whichuses pieces of the original poemas lyrics.Furthermore, it is Iron Maiden's longest song to date, at 13minutes and 34 seconds in length!!!.

It belongs to the album Powerslave (1984), their fifth studioalbum: once it was finished, the band began the World SlaveryTour.The tour started in Warsaw, Poland on 9th August 1984 andended in Irvine, California on 5th July 1985, lasting 331 daysand touching 26 different countries.A video entitled Behind the Iron Curtaindocumented the band's first shows inPoland, Hungary and Czechoslovakiasince they were regarded as the firstrock act to take a full stage show intothe Eastern Bloc, a landmarkachievement at the time.

The choiceof the songswas notcasual:it was based on their content andtheir message, namely that it isnecessary for humanity to recognizeand respect every living thing,both great and small, every livingcreature wherever they may live.How can there be freedomwithout respect?

The faithfulness of the adaptation is striking: the lyrics are basically grouped into four-line stanzaswhile six-line stanzas are reserved for the most salientmoments.Hear the rime of the ancient marinerSee his eye as he stops one of threeMesmerises one of the wedding guests.Stay here and listen to the nightmares of the sea. [ ]"Day after day, day after day,we stuck nor breath nor motionas idle as a painted ship upon a painted oceanWater, water everywhere andall the boards did shrinkWater, water everywhere nor any drop to drink."

quotations alternate with synoptic parts in absolutecoherence."One after one by the star dogged moon,too quick for groan or sigheach turned his face with a ghastly pangand cursed me with his eye.Four times fifty living men(and I heard nor sigh nor groan)with heavy thump, a lifeless lump,they dropped down one by one."The curse it lives on in their eyesThe mariner he wished he'd dieAlong with the sea creaturesBut they lived on, so did he.

the rhythm is consistent with the content: one is for the narrative parts atthe beginning and at the end ofthe song; one is for the most dramatic parts; a long musical solo introduces the reading of themost tragic passage, i.e. thedeath of the mariners one by one; accompanies the passage itselfwhich is both spooky and bloodcurdling, with the noises made bythe creaking woodplanks of a ship in the background.

The Rime is only one of the manytexts which have become a sourceof inspiration for their songs: Lord of the Flies by William Golding; The Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux; The Murders in the Rue Morgue by Edgar Allan Poe; Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad: Il nome della rosa by Umberto Eco.They draw from historical events, mythology, the Bible in order toput into music themes which are immortal.

Rime of the Ancient Mariner is a song by Iron Maiden, an English heavy metal band from Leyton in east London, formed in 1975 by bassist and primary songwriter Steve Harris. It is a musical re-telling of S.T. Coleridg

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