Articles by: David Marker

  • Art & Culture

    Double Pipes in the Mountains of Amatrice


     In September 2010, during a three-week trip in southern Italy to make ethnographic field recordings of traditional Italian music, I spent several days in the small cluster of mountain-villages around the town of Amatrice in Lazio. I was accompanied by my friend Andrea Di Giambattista, a large-animal veterinarian and musician who plays a rare type of Italian bagpipe indigenous to the region known colloquially as “le ciaramelle amatriciane.”


    While the area of Amatrice is most well known for its famous pasta dish, it also plays host to an obscure form of zampogna that has two chanters and no drone pipes – perhaps the closest contemporary link to the ancient roman double pipes often seen on carved reliefs in the Vatican Museum.


    The Amatrice pipes are used to accompany improvised sung poetry as well as for dancing the “saltarella,” the regional folk dance. It is also used to escort the bride from her home to the church as part of the traditional Amatrice wedding ceremony. Aside from accompanying Andrea on the occasional veterinary call (I watched him and two old men rather comically chase a cow all over a field so they could administer a pregnancy test) our main objective was to track down a rather elusive bagpiper in the area named Rosolino Rosati.


    Up until a few years prior, Rosolino was just one of just two remaining players of this strange instrument (the other was Nello Sciarra). Andrea, as well as a couple other guys in their late 20s, had recently learned the instrument saving it from the brink of extinction. In order for the young musicians to learn the traditional reportorio and playing style, it was important they learn from the last two remaining pipers. Nello Sciarra, the other elderly piper, was very available to the young musicians. But Rosolino seldom played in public, and had not been recorded in 20 years, thus it was critical that we convince him to let us record him. Andrea and


    I arrived at Rosolino’s house to find his wife telling us that he was out with his sheep in the field but that he would not be able to play because a relative has recently died. In Italian culture it is forbidden to be heard playing music during a time of morning. We went out to the field to find Rosolino in the hopes that we could convince him to play. Standing across the barbed wire fence surrounded by his sheep dogs, Rosolino explained that he did not have his pipe with him and could not play anyway since there had been a recent death. Andrea had brought his pipes with him and played for him. I had started to learn to play this instrument the year before after acquiring an antique pipe from the son of a deceased pipemaker, and while I was not very good at it yet, I thought that perhaps if I played for Rosolino it might convince him to play for us. I took Andreas pipes and huffed up the goat-hide bag and started to play through my riffs that I had learned. Even though my playing was less than stellar as a beginner, Rosolino was shocked.


    He had perhaps never seen an American before and here I was standing before him up in the mountains playing this rare instrument that until a few years ago only two people in Italy played. His demeanor changed and he described to us the location of a field out in the country. He said if we met him there at sundown he would bring his pipes and play for us, this way no one in the town would hear him play. That evening Andrea and I drove out to where we understood the field to be. We waited for what seemed an eternity. We were full of nervous excitement at the opportunity to record this legendary piper. Finally we saw Rosolino’s Fiat Panda pull up and we followed him into the field. I quickly began to set up my recording equipment. Andrea dug a bottle of wine out of the cluttered back seat of his veterinary equipment filled car and gave the bottle to Rosolino who took long swigs and even poured wine into the goat hide bag to give the cane reeds some moisture. Rosolino began to play the instrument and Andrea and I looked to each other in complete contentment that we were finally getting the recordings!


    The look on Andrea’s face as he played the tambourine accompaniment was unforgettable. He was so excited. After we made several different recordings I conducted a brief interview with Rosolino in which he reminisces about learning the instrument as a kid. He mentions a locally famous piper named “Raffone” who had influenced him greatly. Alfredo “Raffone" Durante, was a piper who was recorded by Alan Lomax in 1954. The recording can be heard on The Alan Lomax Collection: Italian Treasury – Folk Music and Songs of Italy, on iTunes. Interestingly, the antique bagpipe that I had purchased the previous year was made for Raffone by a local carpenter.


    When I acquired the pipes they still had the cane reeds made by Raffone mounted in them. I purchased the pipes from the son of the now deceased pipe maker who also spoke to me about Raffone. Rosolino Rosati passed away in 2012. Fortunately, there are a handful of young enthusiastic men from the region who have started to learn this instrument. The influence of the last two pipers, Rosolino Rosati and Nello Sciarra were critical for helping to preserve the authenticity of the tradition. I have felt honored that I could be a part of this process, and I continue to learn and play “le ciaramelle” to this da

  • Art & Culture

    Zampogna: The Soul of Southern Italy


    When I was 25 years old, in the midst of law school, I took a backpack full of camera equipment to southern Italy with the crazy idea of making a feature length documentary about Italian bagpipes. The film was to be a reflection of my personal and romanticized perception of the pastoral culture of southern Italy as I had experienced it through the hospitality of my Italian family. I wanted to make a 21st century odyssey, to show that the magical and arcane still exist in this information age. It's been over 5 years since I shot this film. Looking back I often envy the obsessive enthusiasm and total naivety I had going into the project. I feel very fortunate that I had this experience because it jumpstarted me and made me aware of a process of cultural exploration and discovery that I had never experienced on this level before. 
     
    What initially began as a form of artistic expression, making a film about a subject and culture near and dear to me, began to grow into a sincere desire to document and learn from a culture uniquely different from mine, but one in which I felt a strong connection to because of my family history. My contact with pastoral Italy got me interested in learning about the concept of cultural preservation and documentation. I viewed the pastoral culture of southern Italy as a pre-industrial, hand-made culture, a culture that was, and is, slamming head-on with a more globally homologizing culture of industrialization and mass information. To make things more interesting, I was also trying to place this pastoral culture within the contextual lens of an Italian-American identity, one that had often worked hard to rid itself of associations with peasantry or poverty. 
     
    For me, music is the most tangible manifestation of this culture. Or at least it is the one I can relate to the most. Other elements interested me such as regional dialects, agricultural and cooking techniques, religious observances, textiles and folk art, as well as other local folk practices and lore. But it was the traditional music that truly captivated me - the music and the people who created it.   Yet unfortunately the people who create it are now few and far between. Cultural erosion had been taking place. The societal knowledge of these traditions was being quickly lost, as the younger generations were not carrying them on. 
     
    This erosion of traditional knowledge is certainly not unique to southern Italy and its pre-industrial culture. Southern Italy for me was relevant because I had access to the culture because of my family connection and my proficiency in the Italian language. And arguably, Italy has an extremely high density of cultural diversity within its population and landmass due to its fractured and isolating geography. The result is a complex patchwork of provincial cultures with their own unique music forms, dance, dialects, costumes, cooking, religious practices, etc.
     
    From 2007 up until this past summer, I have had the privilege of making at least one annual trip to Italy to spend time in the field learning, documenting, and participating in the region’s traditional music culture. My emphasis has always been on the study of what I perceive to be the most threatened music expressions. For example, in 2009 I begin spending considerable energy and travel time in the province of Amatrice in the region of Lazio documenting, obtaining and learning to play a rare form of bagpipe that only a handful of people still practiced. More recent efforts have been spent documenting, and learning to play a very rare bagpipe only now played by five people in the town of Monreale, Sicily. Another focus of mine was documenting the last few elderly players of a very rare four-stringed guitar in my grandfather’s family’s town in the province of Salerno. This included convincing the son of the last guitar maker to learn his father’s craft and make me a guitar so that I am now learning this tradition as well as the accompanying singing style in the local dialect. 
     
    My experience with traditional Italian culture as well as my experience sharing it with Italian-Americans through the promotion of my film and field recordings has made me think a lot about the relationship between pre-industrial Italian culture and modern Italian-American identity. We as Italian-Americans have often allowed our indigenous culture to be whitewashed by what we believe to be proper or modern – letting others decide what is of cultural value. Some of this perhaps came from a desire to leave behind the poverty of a feudal economy that many of our ancestors left to come to the new world. But we threw the baby out with the bathwater. There are so many elements of the culture that our parents, grandparents and great-grandparents left behind that I believe we should strive not to forget. Even more, we should embrace them. 
     
    Italian-Americans have proven that as an ethnic group they can make it in the new world, in the new economy, and become “American.” Now we are in a position where we can look at our ethnic past from a new perspective –different from how the immigrants viewed the old world as they leapt off the boats to arrive in America. I believe that if we as Italian-Americans begin to embrace these elements of our past identity that this pride will carry over and embolden Italians in Italy to show more interest in their traditional arts. I know from experience that Italians do care about our perception of Italy and its culture, and what we value does matter to them.
     
    I’m not saying that everyone needs to go out and learn to play the zampogna. But I think that Italian-Americans need to challenge themselves to view their ethnicity from a fresh perspective and rely less on the old and tired clichés and stereotypes that have been fed to us over the years by lazy Italian-American organizations. We need less “mambo-Italiano” and more “zampogna,” “organetto,” or “chitarra battente” playing the “tarantella.” Now with the Internet we can learn so much and facilitate even greater cultural connectivity with those across the ocean. 
     
    For the first time I am making my documentary film, Zampogna: The Soul of Southern Italy, available for free in high definition on Youtube. I think it’s a very good starting place and introduction to the pre-industrial pastoral culture that I’m so passionately advocating here. I hope people can watch it with an open mind and an open heart and be proud of the beautiful culture and way of life that Italians created in their little part of the Mediterranean.  And if you are Italian-American, don’t forget that this is your culture too.



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    The DVD can be purchased online: https://www.createspace.com/298147