Dudamel as of 2009 is conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, an honor usually reserved to conductors who are much older (Photo: Gustavo Bandres)
Gustavo Dudamel
A conquering conductor
Though still under thirty, he has already been heard all around the world, using his baton to conquer the planet
Dudamel as of 2009 is conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, an honor usually reserved to conductors who are much older (Photo: Gustavo Bandres)
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SONIBERTH JIMÉNEZ
EL UNIVERSAL
Dudamel conducting the Simón Bolívar Symphonic Orchestra – Royal Albert Hall, London
The most exquisite audiences have been seduced by his talent.
Critics cannot praise him enough. Adjectives abound when referring
to Gustavo Dudamel. He has been called "a prodigy" and "music
superstar," labels well deserved. At age four, he learned
to play the violin. At sixteen, he began to conduct orchestras,
and at twenty-four, he became the main conductor of the Simón
Bolívar Orchestra, the national youth orchestra of Venezuela.
As if all that is not enough, he will conduct the Los Angeles
Philharmonic Orchestra from 2009.
This 28 year old is no stranger to success. In 2004, he won
the Gustav Mahler Conducting Prize in Germany. A year later,
he made his Proms debut in London and won the Beethoven Ring
Prize, created by the Society of Friends of Beethovenfest
in Bonn. He also debuted with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra
and the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and signed a recording
agreement with Deutsche Grammophon.
More recent achievements include conducting the New York
Philharmonic Orchestra and bringing the Simón Bolivar
Youth Symphonic Orchestra to Carnegie Hall. After Dudamel
conducted the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, the orchestra's
double bassist since 1966, Orin O'Brien, said "I cannot tell
you what an impression that Gustavo D. has made on us... He
just bounded onto the stage with a big grin and proceeded
to conduct perfectly, every beat in place, with incredible
inner pulse always, with a sense of color very much similar
to the energy and spirit as Lenny Bernstein used to have:
a shared joy in music making".
The double bassist remembers that the orchestra's clarinet
player, Stephen Freeman, was quoted in the New York Times
as saying that Dudamel "reminds him of the young Bernstein",
and O'Brien says she "concurs wholeheartedly". In her opinion,
the Venezuelan conducts "just like (Riccardo) Muti does and
Bernstein used to".
Renowned violinist Joe Sherman, who studied with the NY Philharmonic
Orchestra and founded the High School for Violin and Dance
in Bronx, attended the general rehearsal of the Simón
Bolívar Youth Orchestra in Carnegie Hall. "I feel like
I just took a master class in orchestral playing. The LA Philharmonic
is blessed to get him. I went to the rehearsal with Stephanie
Chase (who teaches violin at Nueva York University), and she
was every bit as much impressed as I was", said Sherman.
After that Carnegie Hall performance of the Simón Bolívar
Youth Orchestra, The New Yorker raved that Gustavo Dudamel
has a "zeal that even the toughest professionals find irresistible".
Simon Rattle, conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
is one of his most loyal followers and has hailed him as "the
most astonishing and talented conductor I have come across".
In spite of endless praise, Gustavo Adolfo Dudamel Ramírez
shuns being labeled a "prodigy". After a successful opening
night of Don Giovanni in Milan's La Scala, the musician born
in Barquisimeto, Lara state, on January 26th, 1981, pointed
out that he is no child prodigy. "I study and work hard; I
am disciplined and, above all, love what I do".