Lo sai che più si invecchia Più affiorano ricordi lontanissimi Come se fosse ieri Mi vedo a volte in braccio a mia madre E sento ancora i teneri commenti di mio padre I pranzi, le domeniche dai nonni Le voglie e le esplosioni irrazionali I primi passi, gioie e dispiaceri La prima goccia bianca che spavento E che piacere strano E un innamoramento senza senso Per legge naturale a quell'età I primi accordi su di un organo da chiesa in sacrestia Ed un dogmatico rispetto Verso le istituzioni Che cosa resterà di me? Del transito terrestre? Di tutte le impressioni che ho avuto in questa vita? Mi piacciono le scelte radicali La morte consapevole che si autoimpose Socrate E la scomparsa misteriosa e unica di Majorana La vita cinica ed interessante di Landolfi Opposto ma vicino a un monaco birmano O la misantropia celeste in Benedetti Michelangeli Anch'io a guardarmi bene vivo da millenni E vengo dritto dalla civiltà più alta dei Sumeri Dall'arte cuneiforme degli Scribi E dormo spesso dentro un sacco a pelo Perché non voglio perdere i contatti con la terra La valle tra i due fiumi della Mesopotamia Che vide alle sue rive Isacco di Ninive Che cosa resterà di noi? Del transito terrestre? Di tutte le impressioni che abbiamo in questa vita? Mesopotamia © 1988 Franco Battiato "Mesopotamia" is a lightly edited version of a song Battiato wrote for Gianni Morandi in 1988 (“Che cosa resterà di me” from the album Dalla/Morandi). |
You know that the older you get the more the most distant memories emerge as if it were yesterday. Sometimes I see myself in the arms of my mother and I still feel the tender comments of my father. The lunches, the Sundays at the grandparents, the desires and the irrational explosions, the first steps, joys and disappointments. The first white droplet, what fear and what strange pleasure. And a senseless falling in love for natural laws at that age. The first chords on a church organ in the sacristy, and a dogmatic respect for institutions. What will remain of me? Of my terrestrial transit? Of all the impressions I’ve had in this life? I like the radical choices, the conscious death that Socrates self-imposed, and the mysterious and unique death of Majorana. The cynical and interesting life of Landolfi, the opposite, but near to a Burmese monk. Or the heavenly misanthropy in Benedetti Michelangeli. Even I, to view myself well, have lived for millennia and I come straight from the highest civilization of the Sumer, from the cuneiform art of the Scribes, and I sleep often inside a sleeping bag because I don’t want to lose contact with the earth. The valley between the two rivers of the Mesopotamia that saw at its banks Isaac of Nineveh. What will remain of us? Of our terrestrial transit? Of all the impressions we’ve had in this life? English translation © 2020 Dennis Criteser Giubbe rosse was released in 1989. It captures performances from the winter portion of the Fisiognomica tour, and included four Battiato songs not previously released on any of his albums. |
Franco Battiato - musician, singer/songwriter, composer of electronic, avant-garde and classical music, filmmaker, painter, student of history and of esoteric and spiritual traditions. Battiato was by turns intellectual, poetic, visceral and meditative; his musical journey and artistic voice are absolutely unique in the landscape of Italian pop music. His career was marked by multiple reinventions as he followed his muse for over fifty years of making music and meaning.
Saturday, September 1, 2018
Mesopotamia
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