“Pacienza, pane e tempo” is a new album by Italian multi-instrumentalist and composer Francesco
Di Cristofaro, released on February 20, 2026 in physical and digital formats via Liburia
Records. The work is conceived as a sonic tribute to writer and intellectual Leonardo Sciascia, and
to his radical investigation of power, violence and dissent within the historical framework of the
Spanish Inquisition in Sicily.
At the core of the album lies the story of Fra Diego La Matina, an Augustinian friar from
Racalmuto who, in 1658, killed his inquisitor Juan Lopez de Cisneros after enduring years of
imprisonment, torture and trials. In his book Death of the Inquisitor, Sciascia transforms this
historical episode into a broader reflection on the mechanisms of institutional violence and the
fragile boundary between justice and rebellion.
Through the figure of Fra Diego — prisoner, fugitive, heretic, rebel — Sciascia exposes how
religious and political power converged to control bodies and consciences, anticipating forms of
systemic oppression that would shape Sicilian history well into the modern era. His reading
resonates far beyond its historical context, speaking to the present as a timeless meditation on
authority, resistance and individual freedom.
Di Cristofaro translates this narrative into a sonic journey that follows Fra Diego’s final path: the
escape toward Racalmuto, the fatal confrontation with the inquisitor, incarceration in Palermo’s
Steri Palace — one of the most infamous prisons of the Inquisition — and the final Auto da Fé, the
public ritual of condemnation and execution. The album unfolds as a continuous narrative where
music, voice and historical text merge into a single dramatic arc.
The story is guided by the narrating voice of Cesare Basile, whose presence anchors the work in
an oral, almost ritual dimension. The texts are drawn from original prison graffiti carved by
Inquisition inmates, preserved in Palazzo Chiaramonte, as well as from two poems by Leonardo
Sciascia (La notte and Insonnia). The final section uses an excerpt from a 17th-century eyewitness
account of the Auto da Fé, written by Vincenzo Auria in 1658.
Musically, “Pacienza, PANE e TEMPO” operates as a crossover of genres and timbres, combining
acoustic, traditional and electronic instruments into a raw, textural sound language. Di Cristofaro’s
approach avoids stylistic categorization, favoring an expressive palette shaped by tension, silence
and resonance, always in service of the narrative and the spoken word.