What exactly are we supposed to admire about this opera, considered (by some) one of the greatest ever written?
I've seen it in the theatre only once: David McVicar's Covent Garden production, still in repertoire. I'd listened to it several times before that, of course, and each time I'd found myself giving up on it some time after the end of Act 1. The plot is far too complex to command the attention and, for a comedy, it is far, far too long.
There are some good 'hit songs' along the way and a nice overture, but it's a tedious piece of work taken as a whole.
Maybe the people who acclaim it are people who only listen to excerpts discs?
I've made a decent attempt to appreciate this opera - I even tried watching a Blu Ray last month, but it was no good. I don't think the greatest singers, orchestra and conductor who ever lived would be able to convince me that this is anything other than a long, unfunny joke of an opera, and one that lacks a punchline, to boot.
When Da Ponte cracks a joke, it's no laughing matter .....
I've seen it in the theatre only once: David McVicar's Covent Garden production, still in repertoire. I'd listened to it several times before that, of course, and each time I'd found myself giving up on it some time after the end of Act 1. The plot is far too complex to command the attention and, for a comedy, it is far, far too long.
There are some good 'hit songs' along the way and a nice overture, but it's a tedious piece of work taken as a whole.
Maybe the people who acclaim it are people who only listen to excerpts discs?
I've made a decent attempt to appreciate this opera - I even tried watching a Blu Ray last month, but it was no good. I don't think the greatest singers, orchestra and conductor who ever lived would be able to convince me that this is anything other than a long, unfunny joke of an opera, and one that lacks a punchline, to boot.
When Da Ponte cracks a joke, it's no laughing matter .....
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