CHICAGO, IL.- Mortality, the fragility of life, permeates Verdis Un Ballo in Maschera from its lonely first measures.
As the opera opens, a crowd sings while a ruler sleeps. For those who love him, it is a state that should bring him rest and refreshment. For those who conspire against him, it is a premonition of his hoped-for death. That battle between vitality and the grave continues to the scores crushing finale.
It was particularly hard to avoid thinking of endings during the Chicago Symphony Orchestras sumptuous performance of Ballo here Thursday evening. Riccardo Muti, the ensembles music director since 2010, will depart after next season. And after more than a decade dotted by acclaimed concert versions of his beloved Verdi in Chicago, this is his last opera with this superb orchestra. (Saturday and Tuesday bring two final chances to hear it.)
More proof of lifes fragility: COVID-19 very nearly derailed the run.
After missing performances here in April because of a positive test, Muti tested positive again on June 16, leaving that weekends concerts to another conductor and putting Ballo which requires more rehearsals than a normal subscription program in serious jeopardy.
But on Thursday, there was Muti, who turns 81 next month. While the bags under his eyes looked heavier than usual, even from a seat in the balcony, he was still stomping on the podium and vigorously pumping his arms downward to draw out the weightiest marcato emphases. He was still crouching nearly to the floor when he wanted the volume softer, and reaching toward the ceiling to summon thunderous climaxes.
Verdi is his lifes work. Few who chat with him for more than a minute or two avoid a passionate lecture about how the composers scores remain underrated for their sophistication: messily conducted, vulgarly sung and damnably staged.
This positions Muti conveniently in the role of savior, finally wiping the grime from long-dirty windows. Whatever he may think, he is not the only conductor who tries to do Verdi justice, but there is no question that he brings to these operas a gleaming, even fearsome clarity.
And stretching back to his performances of the Requiem as the Chicago Symphonys music director designate in 2009, Verdi has provided a series of exclamation points on his tenure here. Never have I attended an opera performance as breathtakingly focused and ferocious as their Otello in 2011. Macbeth (2013) was a grimly propulsive march, and Falstaff (2016) a witty wonder, a smile in the shape of a symphony orchestra. Only Aida, in 2019, struck me as excessively controlled and arid.
A tense tale of disguises and deceptions, Ballo is by far the strangest of this collection, a product of Verdis middle-period experimentations in emotional ambiguity and sometimes jarring juxtapositions of tone. (It premiered in 1859, after Les Vêpres Siciliennes and Simon Boccanegra, and before La Forza del Destino.)
The opera is an eerie combination of melodrama and lighthearted, operettalike moments, with a homoerotic whisper over its central love triangle: Renato kills his best friend, Riccardo, because Riccardo is in love with Renatos wife, Amelia, but it can be hard to tell which one of them arouses Renatos jealousy more.
The quality of the singers, in some of operas most fiendishly difficult roles, has varied in the Verdi pieces Muti has led here. But the work of his orchestra has been consistently agile and virtuosic, an ideal vehicle for his goal of bringing out rarely heard details without stinting overall blend and drive.
So in this grand but tight Ballo, you heard as you usually dont the slight, sour instrumental harmonies under the conspirators bitter laughter. Later, as those assassins plotted, their crime was sternly echoed in the resonance and unanimity of the evocative combination of harp and plucked double basses.
As Amelia admitted her love to Riccardo, the strings trembled with a softness as palpable as it was audible; those strings had earlier roared with sinewy bristle when Riccardo asked a fortuneteller who his killer would be. The prelude to the second act mingled lyrical expansion, somber brasses and a strangled stutter in the cellos; the Chicago winds these days combine artfully, their variety of textures united by their shared phrasing.
Especially memorable Thursday were the understated eloquence of John Sharps cello solo during Amelias aria Morrò, ma prima in grazia, and the spine sometimes strong, sometimes shadowy provided by timpanist David Herbert. Ballo is full of simmering quiet, from which the full orchestra was able, time and again, to suddenly explode with savage, Mutian precision.
The Chicago Symphony Chorus prepared by Donald Palumbo, here for a stint after the end of the season at the Metropolitan Opera, where he is the chorus master sounded richly massed, and sometimes terrifyingly robust, but not turgid. Even forceful phrases did not cut off abruptly; consonants and vowels alike felt rounded and full.
Best among the featured singers were mezzo-soprano Yulia Matochkina, commanding as the soothsayer Ulrica, and soprano Damiana Mizzi, sprightly but silky as the page Oscar, a rare Verdian trouser role.
Baritone Luca Salsi was an articulate, occasionally gruff Renato. Tenor Francesco Meli like Salsi, a Muti favorite was brash and ringing as Riccardo; his generosity faltered only occasionally at the very top of his range.
When the accompaniment was spare and the vocal line floating, soprano Joyce El-Khoury sang Amelia with soft-grained delicacy, though her tone narrowed as more pressure was placed on it. With her sound brooding, she effectively projected her characters pitifully unmitigated sorrow. But she and Meli were pressed to their limits by the ecstatic end of their Act II duet.
Singing the main conspirators were two talented bass-baritones: Kevin Short and (especially solid) Alfred Walker. Baritone Ricardo José Rivera, clear, forthright tenor Lunga Eric Hallam and sweet-sounding tenor Aaron Short showed the care with which the orchestra cast even tiny roles.
But the star of the show was never in doubt. This was not Mutis final performance in Chicago, not by a long shot. There was nevertheless special poignancy near the end, hearing from the voice of a character named Riccardo, no less a dying farewell to beloved America.
Un Ballo in Maschera
Repeats Saturday and Tuesday at Symphony Center, Chicago; cso.org.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.