Claudio Abbado, Daniel Barenboim and Riccardo Muti all cut their teeth in London in the 1970s. Muti’s decade-long tenure as principal conductor of the Philharmonia (1972-82) lifted the orchestra ...
Bruckner’s 7th was the main piece of the opening program of this year’s Vienna Philharmonic performances under Riccardo Muti. The charismatic Italian who barely needs an introduction ...
This past Friday and Saturday nights and Sunday afternoon, it returned there for three programs, all led by Riccardo Muti, who this year marks an unbroken 55-year association with the ensemble.
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Notebook Riccardo Muti, in what felt like a victory lap, returned to Carnegie Hall to lead the Philharmonic’s annual three-day series ...
Riccardo Muti is regarded as one of the world’s leading conductors. He has worked with most of the top orchestras and was music director at Milan’s La Scala opera house for almost two decades. A ...
All the hallmarks of a Muti performance are on display as the maestro returns to conduct the Philharmonia Orchestra in a ...
The last was yesterday afternoon. On the podium, for all three concerts, was Riccardo Muti, the Italian maestro. He has conducted the Vienna Phil for, I believe, fifty-five straight seasons. Is that a ...
Recent performances at Carnegie Hall, under the Neapolitan-born conductor’s baton, revealed the lasting power and precision of the storied ensemble via programs that included the work of Mozart ...
Born July 28th 1941, Riccardo Muti is an Italian conductor and spent six years as music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. In 1986 Muti was appointed as music director at La Scala, Milan. For ...