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지나쌤

Los Angeles takes baton as flagship for youth orchestras

By Korea Herald

Published : Nov. 14, 2011 - 19:51

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LOS ANGELES (AP) ― Gustavo Dudamel stands off to the side of an orchestra of T-shirt clad teens as they laboriously rehearse Brahms’ “Hungarian Dance No. 5.” He’s listening, not just with his ears, but also with irrepressible fingers that tap and pluck the air as if he’s actually conducting the piece.

At the end, he hops on to the conducto’s podium and, beaming at his rapt pupils, demonstrates that the difference between playing music and performing it is passion.

“Be wild, like the pop music,” the 30-year-old music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic exhorts as he pantomimes a spirited sweep of a violin bow as the kids chuckle. “I know, I am always a pain for all the orchestras.”

Dudamel’s ebullient style of conducting, which sends his long dark curls bouncing as he gestures, has made him the rock star of the classical realm. He flits among concert halls on three continents and runs on a schedule that allots time down to 10-minute segments, but reserves an occasional Saturday morning to coach children in a program that brings Beethoven to the barrios.

It was the original program in his native Venezuela, known as El Sistema ― the System ― that discovered his own musical talent at age 10.
Conductor Gustavo Dudamel and the Youth Orchestra of Los Angeles rehearse at YOLA EXPO Center Chamber Orchestra in Choral Hall at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles on Oct. 29. (AP-Yonhap News) Conductor Gustavo Dudamel and the Youth Orchestra of Los Angeles rehearse at YOLA EXPO Center Chamber Orchestra in Choral Hall at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles on Oct. 29. (AP-Yonhap News)

With Dudamel at the forefront, Los Angeles has emerged as the national flagship of the U.S. version of the System, El Sistema U.S.A., which in just four years has grown to encompass programs in more than 50 cities.

Under the aegis of the Philharmonic, Los Angeles has the biggest Venezuelan-inspired initiative, enrolling some 500 mostly minority children in two neighborhoods where music is more likely to mean hip-hop than Hayden.

Next year the Philharmonic is stepping up its commitment by launching a teaching center to train instructors in the distinctive El Sistema method, which provides intensive musical training in a way that enhances children’s self-esteem.

The initiative, which also includes adding a third neighborhood program somewhere in Los Angeles County in 2013, has now become part of the Philharmonic’s mission, said Deborah Borda, president and chief executive of the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

“We have an artistic imperative, but we have a social imperative, as well,” she said.

It is perhaps only fitting that Los Angeles has taken the baton, since Dudamel is the dynamo behind El Sistema’s global expansion and its star graduate. He is also one of more than 400,000 mostly underprivileged children who have received free music lessons in Venezuela.

The government-funded National System of Youth and Children’s Orchestras of Venezuela, as the $60 million-a-year program was formally called, has existed for 36 years, but it’s only been in the last four years ― as Dudamel’s profile has risen on the global stage ― that it’s started to accelerate internationally.

El Sistema-style programs have since taken root from Australia to Great Britain as the movement has stirred the social conscience of the stuffy classical world and given a new impetus to a musical genre many see as elitist.

It’s sort of given us all new hope that classical music can be relevant and vital again, said Tricia Tunstall, author of the forthcoming book, “Changing Lives: Gustavo Dudamel, El Sistema and the Transformative Power of Music” to be published by W.W. Norton in January.

That is, well, music to the maestro’s ears.

“My main goal, and it’s a big one, is that every child has a chance to get close to music, as a right, as they have access to food, health, education, they get the chance to have art and culture, especially music,” said Dudamel in an interview.