Manlio Sgalambro

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Manlio Sgalambro
Born(1924-12-09)9 December 1924
Lentini, Italy
Died6 March 2014(2014-03-06) (aged 89)
Catania, Italy
Occupations
  • philosopher
  • writer
Websitemanliosgalambro.it

Manlio Sgalambro (Italian pronunciation:

philosopher and writer, born in Lentini.[1]

Biography

Birth and death are the two uniquely real moments. The rest is dream, interrupted by some insignificant flashes of vigil.

— Manlio Sgalambro, Aria di Federico (from Il cavaliere dell'intelletto)

Philosophical production

Sgalambro did not have certificates or degrees as business cards: how he became a writer of philosophy – whose books are translated into French, German and Spanish – is a mystery that he was not able to explain.

Beginning In 1945 he worked jointly with the review Prisma (directed by Leonardo Grassi): the first writing is Paralipomeni all'irrazionalismo.

In 1947, he matriculated at the University of Catania:

I did not matriculate in Philosophy because I studied it by myself. I liked penal law and so I chose the faculty of Jurisprudence.[2]

— Manlio Sgalambro

From 1959, along with Sebastiano Addamo, he wrote for the magazine Incidenze (founded by Antonio Corsano). His first article for the journal was Crepuscolo e notte (reprinted in 2011). Meanwhile, he wrote for the journal Tempo presente (directed by Nicola Chiaromonte and Ignazio Silone).

In 1963, at the age of 39, he got married. The income from citrus orchards inherited from his father was no longer sufficient, so he chose to supplement it by undertaking a thesis for a degree and teaching.

In the late 1970s, Sgalambro began to organize his thoughts in systematic work. Then at the age of 55, he sent his first book, La morte del sole, to the editor Adelphi:

And it rested there for two years. But since I am done in this way, I did not ask anything. Then my wife received a call. They asked me to go to Milan, to forge contact with the editor.[3]

— Manlio Sgalambro

In the following years, with the same editor, he published: Trattato dell'empietà, Anatol, Del pensare breve, Dialogo teologico, Dell'indifferenza in materia di società, La consolazione, Trattato dell'età, De mundo pessimo and La conoscenza del peggio e Del delitto.

In the meanwhile, in the early 1990s, with some friends he established a small editorial activity in

Giulio Cesare Vanini and Julien Benda
.

Collaboration with Battiato

In 1993, he encountered Franco Battiato, accidentally, during the presentation of a common friend's poetry book. After a few days, Battiato asked him to a meeting to propose to him the libretto for the opus Il cavaliere dell'intelletto about Frederik II of Hohenstaufen:

A year ago I didn't know him. Since then we have been worked together. He claims to be just a philosopher, but according to me he is a talent that stimulates and enriches me. It seems impossible to me, today, returning to write the lyrics for my things.[4]

From 1994 until his death, he collaborated on almost every one of Franco Battiato's projects. For him, he wrote:

  • the libretti of the opera Il cavaliere dell'intelletto, Socrate impazzito, Gli Schopenhauer and Campi magnetici;
  • the lyrics of many pop music albums (L'ombrello e la macchina da cucire, L'imboscata, Gommalacca, Ferro battuto, Dieci stratagemmi, Il vuoto, etc.);
  • the screenplays of the movies Lost Love, Musikanten (about the last years of Beethoven's life) and Niente è come sembra, of the television transmission Bitte keine réclame and of the documentary Auguri don Gesualdo (about Gesualdo Bufalino).

Starting in 1998 he penned song lyrics for Patty Pravo (Emma), Fiorella Mannoia (Il movimento del dare), Carmen Consoli (Marie ti amiamo) and Milva (Non conosco nessun Patrizio).

In 2000, he published the single La mer, containing the cover of the famous song by Charles Trenet.

In 2001, he published the album Fun club, produced by Franco Battiato and Saro Cosentino, containing evergreen songs like La vie en rose (by Édith Piaf) and Moon river (by Henry Mancini), but even the ironic Me gustas tú (by Manu Chao).

In 2007, he lent his voice to the DC-9 airliner in Pippo Pollina's opera Ultimo volo ("Last flight"), about the 1980 loss of Itavia Flight 870 in the Ustica massacre.

In 2009, he published the single La canzone della galassia, containing the cover of The galaxy song (taken from Monty Python's The meaning of life), sung with the Sardinian-English group Mab.

Bibliography

Discography

Album

Singoli

  • La mer (
    Sony music entertainment Italy
    , 2000).
  • Me gustas tú (
    Sony music entertainment Italy
    , 2001).
  • La canzone della galassia (
    Sony music entertainment Italy
    , 2009).

Videography

Videoclips

  • Tre poesie (2004).
  • La canzone della galassia (2009).

Collaborations

Literature

Music

Album

Singles

Songs

Cinema

Movies

Documentaries

Videos

Theater

  • Manlio Sgalambro & Franco Battiato, Il cavaliere dell'intelletto: opera in due atti per l'ottocentenario della nascita di Federico II di Svevia (1994).
  • Manlio Sgalambro & Franco Battiato, Socrate impazzito (1995).
  • Manlio Sgalambro & Franco Battiato, Gli Schopenhauer (1998).
  • L'histoire du soldat
    (1999).
  • Franco Battiato, Campi magnetici: i numeri non si possono amare (2000).
  • Pippo Pollina, Ultimo volo: orazione civile per ustica (2007).
  • Manlio Sgalambro, Carlo Guarrera & Rosalba Bentivoglio, Frammenti per versi e voce (2009).

Television

Curiosities

Music

  • In Di passaggio (from L'imboscata) he declaims in ancient Greek:

Ταυτο τενι ζων και τεθνηκος και εγρηγορος και καθευδον και νεον και γηραιον ταδε γαρ μεταπεσοντα εκεινα εστι κακεινα παλιν ταυτα.

— Heraclitus, Fragments
  • In Invito al viaggio (from Fleurs) he declaims (in Italian):

I invite you to the voyage in the land that is like you. The misty sunlights of those cloudy skies have for my spirit the charm of your treacherous eyes, shining brightly. There all is order and beauty, luxury, peace, and pleasure; the world falls asleep in a warm glow of light; see on the canals those vessels sleeping: their mood is adventurous to satisfy your slightest desires.

  • In Corpi in movimento (from Campi magnetici) he declaims (in Italian):

If, in speaking of my points, I think of some system of things, e.g., the system: love, law, chimney-sweep… and then assume all my axioms as relations between these things, then my propositions, e.g., Pythagoras' theorem, are also valid for these things.

— David Hilbert, Letter to Frege of 29 December 1899

Since 1996 he participates in almost every Franco Battiato's tours:

  • In '97 he declaims in Latin on Battiato's song Areknames (from Pollution), renamed for the occasion Canzone chimica:

Bacterium flourescens liquefaciens, Bacterium histolyticum, Bacterium mesentericum, Bacterium sporagenes, Bacterium putrificus…

— Manlio Sgalambro, Canzone chimica
  • In 2002 he sings a new version – with lyrics adapted philosophically – of Accetta il consiglio (taken from The big Kahuna), published the next year in live album Last summer dance.

Cinema

  • In Perduto amor he acts Martino Alliata, philosophy teacher of the leading character (Corrado Fortuna).
  • In Musikanten he acts a noble man from Siena.

Theater

  • In
    L'histoire du soldat
    and in Campi magnetici he is the narrator.

References

  1. ^ Silenzi, Andrea (6 March 2014). "È morto Manlio Sgalambro, filosofo, scrittore e poeta. Per anni è stato il coautore di Battiato" (in Italian). La Repubblica. Retrieved 6 March 2014.
  2. ^ Mariacatena De Leo & Luigi Ingaliso, Nell'antro del filosofo: dialogo con Manlio Sgalambro (Prova d'autore, 2002).
  3. ^ Giorgio Calcagno, Sgalambro: il filosofo è uno spione (from La stampa of August 28, 1996).
  4. ^ Liliana Madeo, Battiato: note per un filosofo (from La stampa of September 19, 1994).

External links