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Gioachino Rossini

Mosè in Egitto

Azione tragico-sacra in Three Acts by Andrea Leone Tottola

Edited by Charles S. Brauner
1090 pages, Three-volume set: Score (2 vols. cloth), lix, 842 p., 9-1/4 x 12-3/8; Commentary  13-1/10 x 10  © 2004
Series: The Critical Edition of the Works of Gioachino Rossini, Section I: Operas

Cloth $200.00

ISBN: 9780226728667   Published July 2005
For sale only in the United States, its dependencies, the Philippines, and Canada

Gioachino Rossini's Mosè in Egitto is an opera that emerged from the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Italian tradition of oratorios written to be performed during Lent. The three-act opera draws from the Biblical book of Exodus to chronicle the story of Moses liberating the Israelites from Pharaoh's rule and guiding them out of Egypt. The librettist, Andrea Leone Tottola, also borrowed from an eighteenth-century drama to add a love affair between Pharaoh's son and an Israelite girl that motivates Pharaoh's final, fatal refusal in the opera to free the Israelites.

This critical edition presents the version performed in 1820 after Rossini had revised the unsuccessful and now lost third act of 1818. The edition includes an appendix with the original aria for Pharaoh written by Michele Carafa, which was performed throughout the nineteenth century even after Rossini replaced it with one of his own. Also featured are vocal ornamentation used in Paris performances and detailed information on the Paris productions between 1822 and 1840. This comprehensive critical edition provides a reliable source for interpretation and study of a work that Rossini called "sublime."
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