May 17, 2010 12:42 AM
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Conductor Gustavo Dudamel's Musical Mission
When we went to Venezuela, we found them everywhere - in schools, abandoned buildings, juvenile detention centers, and even in jails.
Six hundred orchestras and choirs in all - a massive national program with more
than a quarter of a million kids - kids like Dudamel, who started in The
System when he was five and was doing pretty well when we first met him 10
years ago. He says The System kept him out of trouble.
"You speak about the message of 'El Sistema.' What is that message?" Simon asked.
"That through music, through arts is possible to change life of thousands of children, change the life of a complete society," Dudamel said.
Hardly any place needs that change more than West Baltimore, where poverty, drugs, and shootings are endemic; where since last Fall, young children carrying musical instruments to school has been a common sight.
About 150 pre-K to third graders at Lockerman Bundy Elementary School belong to a new privately funded music program started by Marin Alsop, the conductor of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.
Called "Orchestra Kids" - or - "Orchkids" for short, it's another example of the system taking root in America.
"It's all about exposure at a very, very young age. There's so many skill sets that you need: coordination, you have to develop your ear, you have to develop your brain and just like learning a foreign language, the younger you start, the more fluent you become," Alsop explained.
"And that's what you're trying to do with OrchKids?" Simon asked.
"You know, it's sort of a work in progress," Alsop said.
Work really kicked off last October when a truck pulled up at the school carrying $50,000 worth of musical instruments - enough for an orchestra - and enough to make these kids think it was Christmas.
Parents are parents. When you offer someone's child an opportunity to better themselves, I mean, all the par. They jump at it," Alsop said.
Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved. Six hundred orchestras and choirs in all - a massive national program with more
than a quarter of a million kids - kids like Dudamel, who started in The
System when he was five and was doing pretty well when we first met him 10
years ago. He says The System kept him out of trouble.
"You speak about the message of 'El Sistema.' What is that message?" Simon asked.
"That through music, through arts is possible to change life of thousands of children, change the life of a complete society," Dudamel said.
Hardly any place needs that change more than West Baltimore, where poverty, drugs, and shootings are endemic; where since last Fall, young children carrying musical instruments to school has been a common sight.
About 150 pre-K to third graders at Lockerman Bundy Elementary School belong to a new privately funded music program started by Marin Alsop, the conductor of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.
Called "Orchestra Kids" - or - "Orchkids" for short, it's another example of the system taking root in America.
"It's all about exposure at a very, very young age. There's so many skill sets that you need: coordination, you have to develop your ear, you have to develop your brain and just like learning a foreign language, the younger you start, the more fluent you become," Alsop explained.
"And that's what you're trying to do with OrchKids?" Simon asked.
"You know, it's sort of a work in progress," Alsop said.
Work really kicked off last October when a truck pulled up at the school carrying $50,000 worth of musical instruments - enough for an orchestra - and enough to make these kids think it was Christmas.
Parents are parents. When you offer someone's child an opportunity to better themselves, I mean, all the par. They jump at it," Alsop said.
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