Qatar
Dana Al Fardan Unites Qatari Heritage and Sardinian Culture in Landmark Performance titled: “The Song of the Two Seas”
There is a specific, bracing frequency to Cagliari in the winter. As the coastal capital of the Italian island of Sardinia, the city sits perched on the edge of the Mediterranean, its historic stone facades channelling the salt air and the sharp island light. This past New Year’s Eve, however, the atmosphere within the Teatro Lirico di Cagliari—the city’s prestigious opera house and a sanctuary of high Italian culture—held a concert titled ‘Il Canto di Due Mari’ (The Song of the Two Seas) celebrating the sounds of both Sardinia and Qatar.
Sharing the stage with a formidable collective that included the radiant violinist Anna Tifu, avant-garde saxophonist Gavino Murgia, eclectic singer Alice Marras, and a Fijiri percussion ensemble from Qatar, Al Fardan and Pasini designed a 75-minute set that was a masterclass in storytelling. The programme moved with effortless fluidity from the energy of Glinka’s Ruslan and Lyudmila Overture and Ezio Bosso’s Esoconcerto into Al Fardan’s own evocative world. Through a medley from Nadir and the lullaby "Andimironnai", and the atmospheric layers of her album Tempest, notably the haunting "Black Rose" and the surging "Borealis”, the music felt both epic in scale and deeply personal. The concert was performed by the Sardinia Opera Orchestra and Choir and featured the world premiere of a new choral arrangement of Tempest by Maestro Pasini. Conceived specifically for this event, the work was dedicated to the Sardinia Opera Choir by composer Dana Alfardan.
Reflecting on the deeper purpose of the night, Al Fardan noted that the performance was merely the opening movement of a much larger international symphony. She observed that across different cultural landscapes, we all share one rhythm; a truth explored through the intersection of Qatari heritage and Italian tradition. "Our shared human values and shared appreciation for the arts have led us into a series of collaborations which are generating the foundation for a wider and greater cultural integration through several initiatives and activities planned in the near future,” she remarked, grounding her ethereal compositions in a tangible vision for the year ahead.
Whether it is her West End success with Broken Wings or the epic Rumi: The Musical, which graced the London Coliseum before its Doha homecoming, her work is defined by a refusal to be boxed in. This performance in Cagliari did more than just salute the close of a landmark year; it served as a resonant prelude to 2026, signalling a future of ambitious collaborations in tourism, enterprise and the arts between Sardinia and Qatar.