NEW YORK, NY.- Deep in Verdis opera Don Carlo, an impassioned solo cello line embroiders a bass aria with a vein of feeling.
On a recent evening, conductor Carlo Rizzi was leading the work at the Metropolitan Opera. Rizzi isnt demonstrative on the podium; his gestures tend to be controlled, focused, professional. But from a seat at the back of the pit, it was possible to see him, at the end of the aria, smile slightly and blow a subtle kiss down in the direction of the orchestras principal cello, Rafael Figueroa.
It was an affectionate, familial gesture from a man who has become family at the Met. Don Carlo, which runs through Saturday, is part of a three-production fall for Rizzi along with Cherubinis Medea, the season opener, and Puccinis Tosca that brings his number of performances with the company to more than 250 since his debut in 1993.
I am not 20 anymore, Rizzi, 62, said in an interview the morning after a Don Carlo and before a Tosca that evening. Particularly after the pandemic, I want to enjoy what Im doing. Thats why Im happy about these three works at the Met. Each one, in a different way, has been rewarding.
Rizzi is among the stars of the Mets not-quite-stars, in company with conductors like Nello Santi (who led some 400 Met performances between 1962 and 2000) and Marco Armiliato (nearly 500 since 1998). These are not famous names, just musicians experienced and respected enough to allow the companys vast repertory factory to function, particularly when it comes to core Italian works like La Bohème, Rigoletto and La Traviata that must be put on with perilously little rehearsal time.
His name and face familiar to Met regulars from the side, with his toss of silver hair and chin stubble, he looks a little like Plácido Domingo Rizzi is the kind of artist who can be entrusted with Medea, a rarely performed opera that he had never done or even seen, late in the game, in addition to his long-scheduled Tosca and Don Carlo.
He did three operas at once, said soprano Sondra Radvanovsky, who sang the title role in Medea. Who else can do that? And not just get through them: These were three spectacularly conducted operas. In my opinion, he is one of the best Italian conductors living right now.
Yet many descriptions of Rizzi include variations on the apologetic phrase but in a good way.
Its going to sound pejorative, tenor Michael Fabiano, who starred in Tosca, said, but I find him academic, in a good way. Hes very studied and highly informed.
Peter Gelb, the Mets general manager, added, Hes considered to be really strong, really solid, really reliable solid in a good way.
The takeaway is that the soft-spoken Rizzi embodies qualities of patient, unshowy craft and dependability that are often overlooked, sadly old-fashioned and definitely unsexy. But they should not be taken for granted.
Its underestimated how difficult it is for a conductor to succeed at the Met, Gelb said. There arent so many who have the degree of expertise and level of musicality when it comes to Italian repertoire that he has. Were fortunate to have a conductor of his quality willing to come here to do the standard repertory.
Born in 1960 in Milan, Rizzi didnt grow up in a musical family; his father was a chemist and his mother an accountant. But he was shy as a young child, and his parents tried to draw him out with piano lessons; he flourished. (His two siblings ended up with musical careers, too.)
On top of his studies, Rizzi spent many nights watching opera at the Teatro alla Scala. These were Claudio Abbados years as music director there, and the productions and casts were regularly superb.
I was a pianist, and at the time I was very good at sight-reading, Rizzi said. That means that every clarinetist, bassoonist, singer and double bass player was coming to me. And making music together started to become more interesting than just the piano.
He conducted chamber orchestras, and Mozart concertos from the keyboard, and in his late teens began working as a repetiteur the opera rehearsal assistant position that was the main root of old-school conducting careers.
Rizzi did well in a couple of competitions and began to find work in regional capitals such as Palermo and Trieste. Word spread among singers. He was invited to conduct the Donizetti rarity Torquato Tasso at the Buxton Festival in England in 1988; that led to an engagement at the Royal Opera in London, and a broadcast reached Brian McMaster, then the leader of Welsh National Opera, who hired Rizzi as music director in Cardiff.
Matthew Epstein took over for McMaster just as Rizzi was starting his tenure. (Rizzi served in the role from 1992 to 2001, then again, after his successor resigned, from 2004 to 2008.)
Lets be honest: Carlo, with his name, is going to be used around the world mostly for the Italian repertory, Epstein said. But in Wales he did Elektra; he did Rosenkavalier; he did Peter Grimes and The Rakes Progress. Hes a superb theater conductor, in the smallest of small groups of people who really work in the theater.
His Met debut was in La Bohème, which he has since done more than 60 times with the company. He led a new Lucia di Lammermoor in 1998, a new Il Trovatore in 2000 and two new stagings of Norma, in 2001 and, starring Radvanovsky, on opening night in 2017. Medea was his third time opening a Met season.
Yet Rizzi remains under the radar in New York. His work this fall has been like his Met career in general: nothing fancy, nothing fussy, just clear, compelling readings.
Its not anything new or different, just the idea of being musically aware with every dramatic beat, said tenor Russell Thomas, who sang the title role in Don Carlo. This is maybe my fourth production, and I never had anybody go into that much detail.
Rizzis Medea had the formality of Gluck, who influenced Cherubini, mixed with hints of the tumultuous Sturm und Drang movement to come. Tosca was colorful and propulsive; Don Carlo, sober and weighty.
The way they play Medea is not the way they play Tosca, he said. The flexibility is one of the great things about this orchestra.
Among Rizzis upcoming projects is to record orchestral suites he has drawn from Madama Butterfly and Tosca. In future seasons at the Met, hes slated to return for, yes, Puccini and Verdi including more Bohème and a revival of Un Ballo in Maschera.
I really feel, since we did the Norma opening night to now, hes a much different person, Radvanovsky said. Hes more relaxed; I feel hes more comfortable in his baton skill, his skill with the orchestra. His musical language has really relaxed and grown.
Rizzi said: I dont want to sound like an old sage, but Im always in development. I learn more about conducting every day.
Perhaps unexpectedly, given that he is best known for leading the most familiar works in the repertory, in 2019 he became the artistic director of Opera Rara, a London-based company devoted to underperformed titles.
Carlo is incredibly knowledgeable, musicologically and dramaturgically, Epstein said. Thats why this Opera Rara thing is good for him. But he should be the music director of an opera house in Italy. Its silly he hasnt. And he should have had a go in this country as music director in one of the main houses. Hes not the ordinary Italian conductor hes just not. Hes better.
Fabiano, the tenor, locates in Rizzi the spirit of these older conductors Votto, Fausto Cleva, Gavazzeni who had an inherent knowledge of the repertory and knew deeply the needs of the singer. An understanding of what singers need, and the deep care for the letter of the music, the construction of the music, makes for a very terrific maestro.
And while Rizzi is not the most breathlessly marketed baton, Donald Palumbo, the Mets chorus master, put it simply: For me, hes a star.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.