Gustavo Dudamel on his enduring love of Los Angeles as he prepares to lead the NY Phil
The Venezuelan conductor shares how 17 years leading the LA Phil shaped him as he looks forward to a ‘super exciting’ New York move

New York’s classical music fans treated it as a cultural breakthrough; Dudamel is expected to transform the orchestra as a cultural institution when he returns in autumn as its music and artistic director.
Transformation, be it cultural, orchestral or personal, has marked Dudamel’s 17 years as music – and more recently, artistic – director of the LA Phil, a tenure that is now coming to an end with his three weeks of concerts at the Disney Hall to close the season on June 7, followed by a celebratory weekend at the Hollywood Bowl in late August.
But in his dressing room after a recent Walküre rehearsal, Dudamel says – as he has said before – that he does not think of this as a culmination, but merely the beginning of a new adventure. He is apartment shopping in New York. But he is keeping his house in Los Angeles.
“We are talking about projects,” he says. “Look, I’m coming back for two weeks in December,” when he will lead Beethoven programmes. He returns in the spring. The Bowl will always be a second home.
“I’m living here and I’m not living here,” he says. “The connection will always be here.”