Gustavo Dudamel, superstar maestro, meets New York

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, April 20, 2024


Gustavo Dudamel, superstar maestro, meets New York
Gustavo Dudamel at the ceremonial signing, with the board co-chairs, Peter May, left, and Oscar Tang at David Geffen Hall, in New York on Feb. 20, 2023. Behind him are Gary Ginstling, the orchestra’s executive director, and Deborah Borda. (James Estrin/The New York Times)

by Javier C. Hernández



NEW YORK, NY.- Gustavo Dudamel, groggy after a late-night flight from Los Angeles but still in good spirits, wandered into a roomful of New York Philharmonic employees, board members and donors Monday afternoon and beamed.

“I feel like Mickey Mouse,” he said as people approached to shake hands and pose for photos.

It was Dudamel’s first visit to New York since being named the Philharmonic’s next music and artistic director — a post he will assume in 2026 after the conclusion of his tenure at the Los Angeles Philharmonic — and he was already playing the role of celebrity conductor.

During his two-hour appearance at David Geffen Hall, the Philharmonic’s home, Dudamel, 42, offered few specifics about his vision, saying he needed more time to get to know the city and the orchestra. But he put on full display some of the qualities that made him the Philharmonic’s choice: charisma, charm and an ability to bring fresh excitement to classical music.

He took part, with childlike giddiness, in a contract-signing ceremony. (“Are these presidential pens?” he asked as he prepared to put his name on the five-year document, which he had already signed electronically earlier this month, when the Philharmonic, in a major coup, poached him from LA.)

He took questions from the Philharmonic’s leaders and the news media, weighing in on the future of classical music; his tenure at the Los Angeles Philharmonic, which he has led since 2009; and his sports allegiances. After initially declining to take sides in New York Mets versus New York Yankees, he said he was a fan of the Cardenales de Lara of Barquisimeto, Venezuela, his hometown, but also of the Los Angeles Dodgers, because of their Brooklyn heritage. Finally, he declared, with an air of hesitation, “I love the Yankees, too.”

He mingled with the orchestra’s musicians, praising their sound; discussing Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 9, which they will perform together in May; and thanking them for the gifts they had provided while the orchestra worked to woo him. (He told cellist Maria Kitsopoulos that her homemade cheesecake was a crucial reason he had decided to move to New York.)

Christopher Martin, the orchestra’s principal trumpet, who helped lead the search for a music director, embraced him. Among the orchestra’s players, Dudamel was the favorite from the start.

“This is like a dream, seeing you here,” Martin said. “Nobody can believe it.”

Deborah Borda, the Philharmonic’s president and CEO, who hired Dudamel in Los Angeles in 2007, when he was 26, and spent the past year trying to lure him east, led a conversation with Dudamel on the stage of Geffen Hall before he took questions from the media.

“I always said you would have a ticker-tape parade when you came to New York,” she said after cheers and whistles erupted in the hall.

Dudamel said it was too early to lay out his plans for the orchestra, saying he did not want to impose his vision yet. But he reiterated his interest in creating an education program in New York similar to Youth Orchestra Los Angeles, known as YOLA, which is modeled on El Sistema, the Venezuelan social and artistic movement in which he trained.

He quoted Spanish poet and philosopher Miguel de Unamuno in describing the need to do more to connect with residents, particularly in poor neighborhoods: “The freedom of the people is in their culture.” When a reporter suggested he might call the New York version of his youth orchestra “YONY,” Dudamel smiled and said, “I love the name.”

“This is part of my DNA: to work with young people, to work with communities, to bring the orchestra to the community,” he said. “The New York Philharmonic, as the center of the artistic and musical life of this city, has to play a role, a very important role, in education.”




Dudamel will be the first Hispanic leader of the Philharmonic in a city where Latinos make up about 29% of the population. When a reporter from Telemundo, the Spanish-language network, asked what Dudamel made of this milestone, he said he had not given it much thought. Then he said he hoped his journey from Barquisimeto to some of the world’s most prestigious stages would be an inspiration.

“This can be a model so that girls, boys, young people can have the certainty that dreams can always be achieved,” he said. “You have to work deeply, have a lot of discipline and a lot of love for what you do, but it can be achieved.”

Throughout the day, a recurring topic was Dudamel’s hair, which has been a subject of fascination since he broke onto the international scene in his early 20s.

During a reception, board member Angela Chen asked why he kept it shorter now than in his early days.

“It feels more fresh this way,” he said, moving his fingers through his famous curls, which have started to gray. “One day, it will be very white.”

At the news conference, Dudamel said he was no longer a “young promise” but that he still felt connected to the energy of his youth.

“When I was 24 — 23, 24, 25 — it was crazy; I was a wild animal, not only because of my hair,” he said. “I keep that wild animal Gustavo that is always there, only with less hair.”

Dudamel at moments seemed to be still processing his coming move to New York, which he has described as one of the most difficult decisions of his life.

When he saw actor and filmmaker Bradley Cooper, a friend, before the news conference, he said being in New York felt surreal.

“I don’t know where to place myself right now,” he told Cooper.

On his phone, he showed Cooper a photograph he had seen in Geffen Hall of Leonard Bernstein, a storied predecessor at the Philharmonic with whom he is often compared. (Cooper is directing and starring in a coming film about Bernstein.) In the photo, Bernstein is standing in an elevator after a performance with his eyes closed.

“That says everything,” Dudamel said. “That exhausted look. He gave everything for music.”

At the end of his visit, Borda led Dudamel on a tour of Geffen Hall, which reopened last fall after a $550 million renovation. As Dudamel looked on, she scrolled through a digital display of the Philharmonic’s past music directors — Arturo Toscanini, Mahler, Pierre Boulez, Bernstein — comparing the length of their tenures. They stopped by the new restaurant adjacent to the lobby; on the way out, Dudamel, a whisky fan, marveled at a bottle of 18-year-old Macallan.

In a brief interview before leaving, Dudamel said he was exhausted but happy to finally celebrate his appointment with the orchestra, which he has conducted 26 times since making his debut in 2007.

“I feel that I am blessed in life to have the opportunity to come here, to have the opportunity to extend the family that I have built in Los Angeles,” he said. “There’s a connection between all of this. It’s a big step. It’s beautiful."

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

February 23, 2023

Joan Mitchell Foundation contends Vuitton ads infringe on painter's copyright

We regret the fossil error. It wasn't the first.

Yoko Ono at 90

Masterwork by Rubens to star in Sotheby's Modern Evening Sale this May

Bozar opens an exhibition with works by Swedish artists who are inspired by the spiritual and the occult

Meadows Museum press preview for "In the Shadow of Dictatorship: Creating the Museum of Spanish Abstract Art"

Looted artifacts, returned to Yemen, will go to the Smithsonian, for now

Exhibition in honour of late north-east artist Sally Madge

Gillian Jason Gallery opens an exhibition of works by Julia Bennett and Mizuki Nishiyama

Pirelli HangarBicocca presents "NOw/here" by Gian Maria Tosatti

"Our Own Work, Our Own Way: Ascendant Women Artists in the Johnson Collection" at CMA

The Dayton Art Institute announces Mariah Postlewait as Kettering Curator of Photography and Special Projects

Tim Whiten awarded the 2022 Gershon Iskowitz Prize

Jack Shainman Gallery open their first solo exhibition of works by Rose B. Simpson

'Parade' producers condemn neo-Nazi protest at show about antisemitism

Review: Rude t-shirts and rude awakenings in 'A Bright New Boise'

Iris DeMent is worried about the world. So she made another album.

Gustavo Dudamel, superstar maestro, meets New York

"Shona McAndrew: Rose-Tinted Glasses" opens today at CHART Gallery

Berggruen Gallery opens an exhibition of new paintings by American artist Christopher Brown

Betts Project opens the second solo exhibition at the gallery by British architect Sam Jacob

The Met Opera's new season: What we want to see

Laurie Metcalf to return to Broadway in a horror story, 'Grey House'

How To Overcome the Same-Day Delivery Challenge Through Inventory Management

Dental SEO Australia: The Ultimate Solution for Dentists to Boost their Online Presence

Discover the Latest Subdivisions in Christchurch with Sections for Sale

Massive Bonuses to Enjoy on Vegas7 Games

Top 5 Milky Way Fish Games to Play Online

To Make Your Life Easier, Try Some Fantastic Kitchen Accessories.

6 Innovative Ways to Cultivate Artistic Skills in Children

The Ten Don'ts of Online Reputation Management for Business

Your Guide to the Short North Gallery Hop in Columbus, Ohio




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful