Scenes from “SCARLATTI/CAGE SONATAS, Journey Between Worlds” By David Ting, ‘17 Scarlatti Sonata in D Minor K. 213 Tender keys echo in a cathedral Like drops of a dark gentle storm. O sound of dewdrops slithering down grassblades Before daybreak; this is the pianist’s sustained ppp Cage Sonata No. 14 Beware. Leach the thin night of her Percussive ligaments and bones. And beware Her angular, hypnagogic states, which like remorseless Snakes enjoy dreaming near ancient fires Scarlatti Sonata in D Minor K. 141 Controlled mf cascades. They do more than dance They hope to compete with hummingbirds. The sonata, like Eve, has a few snakeribs from Cage No. 14 Its fleshed bones glint with strong sinews Cage Sonata No. 13 This sonata knows how to forgive. More so than any other thus far. Though its polish is that of a broken mirror. Its glitched visage petrifies air and particulates. A sunbeam transmits dust into an empty theater Scarlatti Sonata in E Major K. 381 A queen commands this noble hunt! I too Would like to be commanded. I now have no fear Of lonely places or of Cage Sonata No. 13. So many Joyful notes on parade, let out of the gate one at a time, trotting in step Cage Sonata No. 12 Old keys tried futilely in ancient doors Apartments too full of stairs, the spiraling flights like Swirls of teeth. The pendulum rhythm sways me, and the tinkling notes Conjuring airy pagodas threatening to lean with the wind Scarlatti Sonata in B Minor K. 87 Think of the cathedral of K. 213, at noon after the rain Surrounded by Italian country hills dotted by villages. At about two minutes in, K.27 is quoted. And again. But Scarlatti, Like Cage, misquotes himself in the name of invention