Le siège de Corinthe

Le siège de Corinthe is a 1826 reworking, for Opéra de Paris, of Rossini’s earlier Maometto II so besides, of course, being in French it is restructured as a three act tragédie lyrique with a substantial ballet in Act 2.  The plot is straightforward enough.  It’s the mid fifteenth century.  Mahomet II is besieging Corinth but unknown to him the king, Cléomène’s, daughter Palmyra is the girl he fell in love with during an incognito trip to Athens.  Cléone has promised Palmyra to his top warrior Néoclès.  After Corinth falls Mahomet promises clemency to the Greeks as long as Palmyra marries him.  She agrees and is cursed as a traitor by her father.  The marriage doesn’t happen for various reasons and Palmyra flees to the camp of the once again revolting Greeks.  When they are defeated for a second time she commits suicide rather than submitting to Mahomet.

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In fair Verona, where we lay our scene

Where better to record a production of Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette than in the spectacular Arena at Verona?  The productio, dircted by Francesco Micheli with sets by Eduardo Sanchi and costumes by Silvia Aymonino, is as spectacular as the setting and also quite weird in a space opera sort of way,  The characters wear huge collars and are colour coded; Yellow for the Montagues, red for Paris and his entourage and blue for the Capulets.  Only the non-feuding characters escape this schema notably, of course, the two lovers and Friar Lawrence.  There are also lots of colourful cage like structures that character pop in and out of or sing from and a huge chorus and crowd of supers flow all over the vast space.  It’s amazing to look at and actually suits a straightforward telling of the story quite well.

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