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Gustavo & Gustav's 5th Symphony | |||||||||
"...each note a universe! ...a reference point in my life" | |||||||||
GUSTAV MAHLER's symphonies are a force of nature - complex works of such unusual musical and metaphysical dimensions that conductors do not normally attempt to perform, let alone record, them until they have reached certain peaks in their careers. So,
what business does a 26-year old "kid" from Venezuela have
conducting AND recording Mahler's challenging "GIANT" symphony
at the beginning of his career, with an orchestra of even younger kids?
It is a question asked not in disapproval but in wonderment, with the
same jaw-dropping amazement that Sir SIMON RATTLE felt when he saw a
children's orchestra in Venezuela, "where nobody's feet literally
touched the ground, wonderfully playing Tchaikovsky's Marche Slav, led
by an 8-year old who has no business having so much technique on a violin...!"
It is a question that does not beg for an answer other than acceptance,
the way one welcomes the unexpected appearance of genius and good fortune.
In light of this, it becomes easy to understand how the more than 150 talented youngsters who make up the SIMON BOLIVAR YOUTH ORCHESTRA, most of them plucked from the barrios and inner cities of Venezuela and every single one schooled not in any of the world's famed music academies but in the regional music centers of the country's EL SISTEMA, can play Mahler's 5th without fear and with seeming emotional maturity. And certainly with the reverent excitement that accompanies the exhilarating discovery, by young or old, of a universe in every note of a Mahler masterpiece - as you can ascertain from the above video clip as well as from the audio clips below:
As to Dudamel, could it be that he was named GUSTAVO for a then hidden but now obvious reason? How many young people does one come across who get themselves acquainted with Mahler's 5th Symphony at age 11, begin to study it in earnest at 16, conduct it with a professional orchestra at 23, and record it at 26 with one of the world's most respected recording companies?
Fast forward to turn-of the-millennium... in a gymnasium in Barquisimeto, Venezuela, a precocious 17-year old boy named GUSTAVO was about to face the test of his young life. Baton in hand, he stood unfazed on a podium and began to conduct a humongous ensemble of about 800 orchestra and choir members, launching a conducting career (with the CHILDREN'S ORCHESTRA of VENEZUELA, now famously known as the SIMON BOLIVAR YOUTH ORCHESTRA), that would take him barely 6 years later to the Mahler competition in Bamberg (Germany) which he won, hands down, conducting Mahler's 5th. "A conducting animal!" ESA-PEKKA SALONEN, LA Philharmonic Music Director (who served as a juror in the competition and himself an erstwhile enfant-terrible among today's conductors), quickly reported back to LA. The rest, while not quite history yet, is definitely history-in-the-making. Today the Principal Conductor as well of Sweden's premiere Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, in 2009 he inherits the baton from SALONEN as Music Director of one of America's top-tier orchestras, a plum position by any measure. His youth and boundless energy combine with a star quality that makes him the indisputable and much-needed icon for the future of classical music. This being the 21st century, the world is his stage as he conducts from the podiums of hallowed concert halls, and millions begin to track the orbit of his rocket-ship career and perhaps witness the dawning of a DUDAMEL era in the performing arts. If this were early 20th-century Vienna, wouldn't this phenomenon of a conductor be called GUSTAV? -GJBCajipe /© FanFaire
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HERE to join a FanFaire-DGG GIVEAWAY of the CD
"Mahler: Symphony No. 5" with Gustavo Dudamel and the Simon
Bolivar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela.
SUPER
CONDUCTOR
SIMON BOLIVAR YOUTH ORCHESTRA
MAHLER 5th
ON 60 MINUTES
- Videos
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