Un'orchestra si prepara per una prova in un'antica cappella sotto gli occhi curiosi di una troupe di documentari televisivi, ma scoppia una rivolta.
Dans un oratoire du XIIe siècle désaffecté, un copiste dépose des partitions sur des pupitres de musiciens. Une répétition d'orchestre va avoir lieu. Les participants arrivent et s'installent. Une équipe de télévision doit faire un reportage, mais on n'entendra que la voix de l'interviewer. Le chef d'orchestre commence la répétition. Il est nerveux, hautain, cassant. Un différent éclate avec le délégué syndical. La répétition est interrompue...
An off-screen Italian television camera crew (voice enacted by Fellini) conducts Television documentary-style 'roving eye' interviews with musicians preparing for a low-budget rehearsal in a run-down auditorium (formerly converted from a 13th-century church — presently slated for demolition, apparently). Speaking candidly and often cynically about their craft, interviewees are seen routinely interrupting one another as their artistic claims are contested or derided by orchestral peers, each self-importantly regarding his own instrument as the most vital to group performance, the most solitary in nature or spiritual in relation — these varied opinions reflecting each listener's intensely personal experience with music, one of the recurring themes of the film.
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