May 17, 2010 12:42 AM
- Text
Conductor Gustavo Dudamel's Musical Mission
It went from nothing three years ago to a free music education program, that after school four hours a day, four days a week, teaches the basics to 300 kids from South L.A., one of the city's poorest neighborhoods.
They're taught everything from the language of music to the fundamentals of rhythm, to how to get that clarinet to make a sound.
On Saturdays, all the kids get together in an orchestra. The day we were there, so was Dudamel. He's been conducting youth orchestras back in Venezuela since he was 13 and has his own way of getting musicians to understand the music.
Almost none of these kids knew anything about classical music before they came to YOLA. What Dudamel knows is that the program does a lot more than teach music. It builds character, discipline and team work and it keeps kids off the streets.
Asked why she picked this neighborhood, Nielsen said, "There are kids in that neighborhood who never leave the boundaries of South L.A. It's needed for them to be able to bust out of the confines of that neighborhood.
They couldn't have "busted out" much further than to the "Hollywood Bowl," a famed outdoor performance venue.
The Bowl may have been empty, but this grandest of stages was packed with youngsters. Dudamel was rehearsing these musicians, many of whom picked up their instruments for the first time only a couple of years ago.
Two days later they were back, playing in a music festival welcoming Dudamel to town, this time before 18,000 people.
What's his vision for the future of YOLA?
"To multiply all the program in Los Angeles and to go around the country," Dudamel said.
Dudamel was in Chicago last year to help make that happen. He went there for a symposium on what The System is all about.
The head of The System in the U.S. said it's already spreading.
And what better way to promote it than this: Venezuela's Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra, flown in for the symposium. Dudamel has been conducting these musicians for 11 years now. They filled up Chicago's Orchestra Hall for a rehearsal.
All these musicians have one thing in common: they started out as youngsters in neighborhood orchestras. That's how the system works.
Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved. They're taught everything from the language of music to the fundamentals of rhythm, to how to get that clarinet to make a sound.
On Saturdays, all the kids get together in an orchestra. The day we were there, so was Dudamel. He's been conducting youth orchestras back in Venezuela since he was 13 and has his own way of getting musicians to understand the music.
Almost none of these kids knew anything about classical music before they came to YOLA. What Dudamel knows is that the program does a lot more than teach music. It builds character, discipline and team work and it keeps kids off the streets.
Asked why she picked this neighborhood, Nielsen said, "There are kids in that neighborhood who never leave the boundaries of South L.A. It's needed for them to be able to bust out of the confines of that neighborhood.
They couldn't have "busted out" much further than to the "Hollywood Bowl," a famed outdoor performance venue.
The Bowl may have been empty, but this grandest of stages was packed with youngsters. Dudamel was rehearsing these musicians, many of whom picked up their instruments for the first time only a couple of years ago.
Two days later they were back, playing in a music festival welcoming Dudamel to town, this time before 18,000 people.
What's his vision for the future of YOLA?
"To multiply all the program in Los Angeles and to go around the country," Dudamel said.
Dudamel was in Chicago last year to help make that happen. He went there for a symposium on what The System is all about.
The head of The System in the U.S. said it's already spreading.
And what better way to promote it than this: Venezuela's Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra, flown in for the symposium. Dudamel has been conducting these musicians for 11 years now. They filled up Chicago's Orchestra Hall for a rehearsal.
All these musicians have one thing in common: they started out as youngsters in neighborhood orchestras. That's how the system works.
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