10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Buy this opera for the singing alone, August 22, 2001
This review is from: Pergolesi - Lo Frate 'Nnamorato (DVD)
This 3 hour opera purports to be 100% Pergolesi. I wouldn't want to have to swear to that, but certainly the music is quite nice and is baroque with a few classical touches. R. Muti conducts a portion of the La Scala orchestra along with arch lutes, theorbos, and harpsichord. The playing is very good, though the string sound is more what I expect of a more modern period. I won't list all the singers, none of whom I recognize except for the Marcaniello (Alessandro Corbelli). There are 6 almost equally important soprano roles and each is sung extremely well. Several of the sopranos are so good that you can only wish the opera were longer so that you could here more. The male roles are well sung and the Marcaniello is excellent for the comic old codger role. While the plot is inconsequential, the comedy is very well done.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Perhaps the 1st Ever Opera Buffa, Revived after 200 Years, October 31, 2004
Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710-1736) suffered both in life and in death. He died at the tender age of 26, and after his death the popularity of his second opera buffa (a form many believe he invented) led to wholesale publication of spurious works under his name which he, of course, could do nothing about. Then for almost two centuries these false works kept coming to light and it was said at one point that only one of his 'true' operatic works survived him, the one that made him famous, 'La Serva Padrona.' However, recent scholarship has assigned a number of other works to him, including this one, his first comic opera 'Lo Frate 'Nnamorato.' That title is in Neapolitan dialect and means 'The Brother in Love.' It has been incorrectly translated through the years as 'The Friar in Love.' There is no friar anywhere to be seen in the opera, but there is a 'brother' named Ascanio (sung, as it happens, originally by a castrato and here sung marvelously by soprano Nuccia Focile). It develops (in the last act, of course) that he is the long-lost brother of two sisters, Nina and Nena, whom he loves (as well as loving another woman named Luggrezia [Neapolitan for 'Lucrezia']; talk about a confused young man!) and thus to the relief of all concerned, him not least, his 'love' for Nina and Nena turns out to be only 'brotherly' not, ahem, romantic. Whew! And thereon turns the whole comedy of this delightful opera. Well, there's also the aged roué in love with a young girl, and a silly and pretentious fellow who is also in love with a young girl, servants who are smarter than their masters and ... you get the idea. This is not 'Hamlet,' folks, nor even 'Cosí fan tutte.' But it is all good fun and the music is terrific.
The opera was premièred in 1732 and enjoyed a brief popularity. Then it was 'lost' until found again thirty years or so ago. Riccardo Muti, the conductor of this performance, was instrumental in bringing it to the stage and this 1989 La Scala production was its first in more than 200 years. Muti brings brio and tenderness to the score and it is hard to imagine a more effective musical presentation. The singers, most of them unknown to me, are simply wonderful. The opera has a large cast and every single one of them has at least one aria. And with the exception of a bit of disappointment in Amelia Felle's performance of Nena's bravura aria with flute obbligato that opens Act III, 'Va solcando il mar d'amore,' there are no disappointments. This is an early work by Pergolesi--well, considering he died so young, I guess they're all early works, but his style did develop considerably over the eight years or so that he was writing--and most of the arias have a folk-song quality to them. This also means that the hummable quality we know from Italian folk music is present here in quantity. Some of you, even if you've never heard the opera before, will be surprised and pleased to recognize the first aria, 'Pupillette, fiammette d'amore,' sung by one of the suitors, Don Pietro, because it was used prominently in Stravinsky's ballet based on (mostly) Pergolesi tunes, 'Pulcinella.'
This is, of course, a late baroque opera and as such features ritornello arias, and I will admit that sometimes I groaned when a long aria seemingly started all over again with the first section repeat. There is no chorus and the recitatives are brief, so the opera comes across as a string of arias. There are a few duets, one trio and the finales of the second and third acts are quintets.
The mise en scène is a single set, a stylized pair of palazzos, side by side, on a turntable. Sets and costumes tend to be pastel--tans, soft yellows, greens, pinks all lit softly but clearly. Quite attractive, I thought.
I was very happy to make the acquaintance of this opera, not only because it documents an important phase in development of opera as an art form (and clearly a forerunner of Mozart and Rossini) but because it was so darned enjoyable.
TT=2hrs, 52 mins; English subtitles; booklet includes the untranslated Italian libretto.
Scott Morrison
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Italian baroque opera treat....lose a star for dvd transfer, December 1, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Pergolesi - Lo Frate 'Nnamorato (DVD)
The sound is excellent, the menu is good, the performance is delightful. I turned up the "sharpness" on my Sony 7000 player to compensate for softness. Fortunately, the lighting is great which helps. I think that the softness is the result of a less than premium conversion from the European video system. Nevertheless this kind of thing must be enormously expensive to produce. We should be thankfull to IMAGE for it. I love the disk. I look forward to some "DDD" (all digital) opera dvds of 1998 performances.
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