Marco Rizo papers

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Collection Data

Description
The Marco Rizo Papers document Rizo’s career, from his early piano performances in Cuba, to orchestrating the Desi Arnaz Band, and on through introducing Latin music to public school children.
Names
Rizo, Marco (Creator)
Arnaz, Desi, 1917-1986
Dates / Origin
Date Created: 1938 - 1999
Library locations
Music Division
Shelf locator: JPB 03-2
Topics
Arrangers (Musicians)
Composers -- United States
Latin jazz
Arrangers (Musicians)
Composers
Music teachers
Genres
Clippings
Photographs
Programs
Scores
Notes
Biographical/historical: Marco Rizo was born in Santiago, Cuba, in 1920. His father Sebastian, the principal flutist with the Santiago Symphony, provided Rizo with his early music education. In addition to playing with his father’s jazzband, Rizo studied classical music, and became an important classical pianist by the age of 16. In 1938 he moved to Havana where he joined the city’s Philharmonic as the official pianist. He then immigrated to the United States in 1940, and studied at Juilliard until 1942, when he joined the war effort as a performer in the 2d Army Military Band. After World War II, his childhood friend, Desi Arnaz, invited Rizo to join his band on tour. This engagement evolved into Rizo’s work on I Love Lucy as the musical director, a position he held for the entire run of the television series (1951-1957). During these years he continued his musical training at UCLA, working under Igor Stravinsky and Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco. Rizo’s career also centered on the arrangement of music, and he arranged songs for a great number of personalities, as well as motion picture studios. In the early 1970s, one of Rizo’s jobs was as the musical director, and sometimes performer, for the Royal Viking Sea cruise ship. During the 1980s Rizo established the South American Music Project, Inc., through which his band visited public schools in New York City (as well as other locales) to teach children about Latin music. His programs enabled each student to learn how to play a Latin percussion instrument, and learn how to play as a group. Recitals were often held to showcase the children’s love of this music. Rizo’s prolific career as a composer and arranger generated 30 albums, and he was an active performer into his later years. His last album, titled Habaneras, consisted of Cuban classical music, and it was released shortly before his death on September 8, 1998.
Content: The Marco Rizo Papers contain scores and other professional materials. Rizo’s career span is documented through concert programs, newspaper clippings, and photographs. Some of this material is written in Spanish. There is little evidence of Rizo’s personal life, but anecdotes may be found in the manuscript drafts he compiled on Desi Arnaz’s life, which includes Rizo’s own experiences.
Physical Description
Extent: 13.43 linear feet 28 boxes
Type of Resource
Text
Still image
Notated music
Identifiers
NYPL catalog ID (B-number): b16031699
MSS Unit ID: 20305
Universal Unique Identifier (UUID): 3568d370-543e-0135-c7c2-02b45faf905c
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