After his retirement he taught voice and singing, first in Milan, and from 1891 at the Moscow Conservatory.
Sierra Leone | Sergio Leone | Bo, Sierra Leone | Sierra Leone National Premier League | Sierra Leone People's Party | Sierra Leone Civil War | Special Court for Sierra Leone | Sierra Leone Creole people | Northern Province, Sierra Leone | President of Sierra Leone | Laureano Leone | Anthony Leone | University of Sierra Leone | Sunny Leone | Southern Province, Sierra Leone | Pier Leone Ghezzi | Leone Strozzi | Leone Pompucci | Waterloo, Sierra Leone | Supreme Court of Sierra Leone | Subaru Leone | Sierra Leone Company | politics of Sierra Leone | Parliament of Sierra Leone | Leone Giraldoni | Leicester, Sierra Leone | Eastern Province, Sierra Leone | Daru, Sierra Leone | Cinzia Leone | Chiefdoms of Sierra Leone |
He set the scene for a succeeding generation of great Verdi baritones that included Francesco Graziani, Leone Giraldoni and Antonio Cotogni, while his chief contemporary rival was Giorgio Ronconi (the creator of Verdi's Nabucco).
Ronconi instigated a long line of great Italian baritones that continued into modern times; but the most esteemed of his contemporaries/immediate successors were probably Felice Varesi, Leone Giraldoni, Francesco Graziani and Antonio Cotogni, all of whom were outstanding Verdi singers.