Serious opera lovers 
                may not approve of this endeavour – 
                the latest offering from the Naxos "Opera 
                Explained" series. David Timson 
                narrates an elementary, nevertheless 
                entertaining, script – punctuated with 
                musical snippets – that takes us from 
                a general account of Mozart's life to 
                a closer inspection of the three Da 
                Ponte operas of which Don Giovanni is 
                the crowning achievement. 
              
 
              
Of course it is of 
                interest to us all to learn about the 
                genesis of Mozart’s operatic masterpiece, 
                and for those of us who prefer to be 
                spoon-fed the biographical details, 
                this CD will be much appreciated. There 
                is nothing revelatory in Smillie’s easily-digested 
                script, but thanks to a very agreeable 
                narrational intonation, we are spared 
                a potentially patronising performance. 
              
 
              
It is a pity, therefore, 
                that the music is not spared this insult. 
                As far as this CD is concerned, music 
                is a means to a narrational ends, and 
                the price we pay is a handful of butchered 
                illustrative musical excerpts. If only 
                Thomson Smillie had paid closer attention 
                to his observation in the CD notes that 
                "it is – as ultimately it has to 
                be – the music that defines the experience". 
              
 
              
A further injury to 
                the musical aspect are the quotations 
                from the Marriage of Figaro. An ugly, 
                warbling Countess Almaviva is, to our 
                great misfortune, neither camouflaged 
                nor supported by the accompanying orchestra’s 
                heavy-handed execution. My heartfelt 
                commiseration that she is reflecting 
                sadly on past happiness and lamenting 
                an unfaithful husband, but must we all 
                suffer her distress? This is, fortunately, 
                not an issue for the ensuing Don Giovanni 
                passages that boast extremely impressive 
                performances across the board. 
              
 
              
Ultimately, this recording 
                satisfies what it sets out to do, and 
                that is to give a layman’s introduction 
                to Mozart’s Don Giovanni with a taste 
                of its musical gems. In doing so, however, 
                the music is necessarily compromised 
                and the story trivialised. Thankfully, 
                however, the performances for the Don 
                Giovanni extracts are good enough to 
                perhaps encourage the listener to purchase 
                the opera proper. 
              
 
              
It is not a crime to 
                be introduced to the opera through the 
                "Opera Explained" series, 
                but if you choose this route, do so 
                in the full awareness that you are only 
                scraping the surface. 
              
 
                Aline Nassif  
              
see also review 
                by Robert Farr