Mosè e Faraone, o Il passaggio del Mar Rosso (TV Movie 2003) Poster

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7/10
A decent production of one of Rossini's weakest operas
TheLittleSongbird4 November 2012
I like Rossini's music very much and his operas too. My favourites are Il Barbiere Di Siviglia, La Cenerentola and William Tell, though even the operas with not so good stories have wonderful music. Mosè E Faraone, O Il Passaggio Del Mar Rosso is really not one of his best, in fact for me it is one of his weakest. The music has some nice moments but it doesn't feel as inspired as some of his other work, but the real let down to the opera is the libretto, which is utter dross. This La Scala is decent and does much with what they have, but I do hesitate in calling it great. There are things that I did find disappointing. The video directing did have a tendency to be too jumpy and random. Barbara Frittoli does sing beautifully and she is very musical as a singer, but as an actress as I can find with her she comes across as mechanical, while Tomislav Muzek's voice didn't come across as very attractive to me. But what really let it down was the lengthy ballet, as well danced as it was it dragged on forever and what made it worse was that it was really ineptly choreographed. However, the production does look neat if slightly old-fashioned, and the staging is no-nonsense and uncluttered which is good, already an improvement over some of Luca Ronconi's other opera productions. The orchestral playing has great sense of style and musicality, the chorus are not too static and sing well in tuning and balance and Riccardo Muti's conducting never allows the production to rush or drag too much. Much of the singing is great. Giuseppe Filanotti does deserve credit, as his character is the only one that is developed well in this opera and as well as a flexible voice and he is always expressive. Erwin Schrott is very good as the Pharoah and at this point showed much promise. The two best performances though come from Sonia Ganassi whose singing is rich and her acting moving and especially Ildar Abdrazakov who commands the stage brilliantly and he also has a ringing warmth to his voice. In conclusion, has many good things but a few improvements could have been made. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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10/10
Run that past me again
Gyran20 January 2006
Conventional wisdom had it that Rossini's comic operas are wonderful and his serious operas are turkeys. I am an admirer of his Barber of Seville and Cenerentola but this is the first serious Rossini I have ever seen. On the evidence of this production, conventional wisdom is correct. This is a turkey, or perhaps navet would describe it more appropriately since it is in French. It is difficult to imagine that the composer of La Cenerentola could write such turgid stuff. If the music is bad, the plot is like a Hollywood epic only with less attention paid to historical accuracy.

In a brilliant production, La Scala almost prove that this opera is worth resurrecting but it does not really come to life until the third act ballet. Praising an opera for its ballet sequence is faint praise indeed. In the fourth act there is a good duet between Anaide (Barbara Frittoli), a young Jewish woman and Amenofi (Giuseppe Filanoti), Pharoah's son. Frittoli also gets a good solo aria. She looks lovely and sings as beautifully as ever but this performance confirms my longstanding impression that her one weakness is in her acting ability. When she sings it is as though her mind is somewhere else, like an unenthusiastic lover mentally preparing a shopping list: "Dunque, domani, gnocchi, pomodori, parmigiano …" The costumes are beautiful, as you would expect in Milano and the split-level sets are sensational. The opera ends with a coup de théâtre, the parting of the Red Sea, but after three hours of this I too felt submerged in a sea of dross.

Oh dear, I can't believe I wrote that after first seeing this opera last year. I seem to remember that I had my ears syringed shortly afterwards. Maybe that was the problem. Anyway, this time round, Mosè was very recognisably the product of the Rossini that I know and love: tuneful arias, extended ensembles, contrapuntal instrumental and vocal lines. I loved every minute. The youthful cast has strength in depth. In addition to those mentioned above, there is a brilliant Mosè, sung by the Russsan bass Ilder Abdrazakov and a show-stealing Pharoah's wife, sung by Sonia Ganassi. Moral: if at first you do not like an opera, listen and listen again
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