Marcia — Sinfonica Antoniana
The banda (wind band) has historically been integral to these outdoor celebrations. Unlike the orchestra, the band is mobile and powerful, capable of leading thousands of pilgrims. The marcia sinfonica emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a hybrid genre: it retains the binary or ternary march form (fast–slow–fast) but incorporates the harmonic language, dynamic shading, and thematic development of the operatic sinfonia.
The Sacred and the Secular: An Analysis of the Form, Function, and Legacy of the Marcia Sinfonica Antoniana marcia sinfonica antoniana
The work follows a modified Italian marcia sinfonica layout, typically in 2/4 or cut time, but expands each section beyond standard military brevity. The banda (wind band) has historically been integral
Marcia Sinfonica Antoniana (likely referring to the work by Italian composer Fulvio Creux or, in a broader generic sense, to processional march-symphonies for St. Anthony’s Feast—most commonly associated with the Festa di Sant’Antonio in Padua or the Italian diaspora tradition). For the purpose of this paper, we will analyze the canonical concert band work by Fulvio Creux (1900–1969), a staple of the Italian and Swiss wind band repertoire. The Sacred and the Secular: An Analysis of
The Marcia Sinfonica Antoniana (Symphonic March of St. Anthony) occupies a unique niche in the wind band repertoire. Bridging the functional processional march and the autonomous concert overture, this work transcends mere street music. Composed by Fulvio Creux, a prolific composer for banda (wind band) in the early-to-mid 20th century, the piece embodies the quintessential Italian marcia sinfonica —a genre that elevates the march’s rhythmic foundation with operatic lyricism, harmonic expansion, and programmatic intent. This paper argues that the Marcia Sinfonica Antoniana functions simultaneously as a religious veneration, a display of band virtuosity, and a sophisticated musical narrative rooted in the trisagio (thrice-holy hymn) tradition.
The Marcia Sinfonica Antoniana by Fulvio Creux is far more than a functional piece for a religious parade. It is a sophisticated concert work that distills the essence of Italian band culture: the fusion of street music and opera, the veneration of local saints, and the celebration of the wind band as a sacred institution. For the performer, it demands both technical precision and spiritual sensitivity. For the listener, it offers a journey from the bustling piazza to the quiet of the basilica. As long as St. Anthony is honored with music, the Marcia Sinfonica Antoniana will remain a cornerstone of the repertoire.
Creux’s Antoniana was likely commissioned for one of these processions or a concorso bandistico (band competition). Its title explicitly links it to the saint, implying that musical themes are meant to evoke the piety, miracle-working, and eloquence of St. Anthony.