There is, finally, something political about this imagined score. In a culture that often privatizes grief and compresses joy into commodity, a fortissimo at dawn is an ethic: make sound together in public; wake one another; refuse the quiet compliance that lets days flatten into each other. And yet, because the piece is a rondo, it remembers to return to smallness — to the PunyuPuri tugs at the sleeves of seriousness — so that volume never becomes tyrannical but remains an act of mutual summons.

Listening to this imagined score is to ride a sequence of contrasts. The opening fortissimo is immediate, body-forward, a sound like a hand slapping a tabletop or the first hot coffee poured into bone-cool hands. It forces the world to orient. Then the PunyuPuri motif returns like a secret handshake: light feet, muted bells, the tiny mechanical joy of things that fit together. Between them, quieter episodes unfold — a sotto voce exchange where one instrument outlines memory (low, wooden, slow) and the other answers with bright, precise flourishes that sound like sunlight on a key. The rondo’s shape guarantees return: each time the PunyuPuri returns, it is a little altered, carrying new harmonic clothes, wrenched through new time signatures, strewn with brief improvisations that feel improvised but are clearly part of a practiced intimacy.

If one were to stage this as a short film: open on a town square at 5:12 a.m., lights flickering, a bakery’s oven breathing warm air. Two performers set their instruments under a streetlight. They don’t wait. The first chord hits like a bell from a fallen clock. Alarmed passersby become converts; a stray dog lifts its head. The PunyuPuri motif arrives between the large chords like a pastry cart bell, coaxing smiles. People gather, not because they meant to be there but because sound makes them belong. The piece builds and then softens; as the sun fully rises, the final Ti... dissolves. No one claps for long; the city returns to its small routines, but the morning is altered.

Visually, imagine the stage at dawn: a horizon-splattered wash of orange bleeding into indigo, two silhouettes crouched like birds. Their instruments are not specified — perhaps a piano and a flute, or a violin and an electrified kalimba — but the aural image is specific. The fortissimo chords make the windows rattle; PunyuPuri trills like a small animal living in the piano’s belly. The musicians exchange glances that are miles long. Each return of the theme is greeted like an old friend who has new news.