Los Angeles Times

Borda given a rousing sendoff

The Philharmon­ic pulls together as a family to deliver a heartfelt farewell.

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC mark.swed@latimes.com

Gustavo Dudamel didn’t dedicate his silken performanc­e of Schubert’s elegant Fifth Symphony on Thursday night to Deborah Borda. But the touchingly tender slow movement spoke for itself.

After opening his program with the symphony, having reached the twothirds point in his current Schubert symphony cycle, Dudamel returned to the Walt Disney Concert Hall stage with a microphone in hand, accompanie­d by Borda, his departing Los Angeles Philharmon­ic boss, and by the orchestra’s board chairman, Jay Rasulo.

“It has been an amazing journey,” Dudamel said in his farewell speech to Borda, who leaves her post as president and chief executive here to head (and, the orchestra world hopes, save) the troubled New York Philharmon­ic after her historic 17-year tenure with the L.A. Phil. In explaining that journey “from being my stalker to becoming my lover,” Dudamel said: “Even if I have been hard sometimes, I love you.”

It was the orchestra’s brief, formal tribute to Borda, who oversaw the completion of Disney Hall and its celebrated opening, who empowered then-Music Director Esa-Pekka Salonen to realize such grand visions for the hall as the Peter Sellars and Bill Viola multimedia “Tristan Project,” who followed Dudamel around the world in her effort to hire him to succeed Salonen, who created Youth Orchestra L.A. and who turned a financiall­y struggling orchestra into the most prosperous and adventurou­s major ensemble in the world. “I hope no one is recording this,” Dudamel said (fat chance), but thanks to Borda, “we have become the envy of the world.”

For her part, Borda, a former orchestra musician herself, gave all the credit to the players, a supportive board, a uniquely warm and adventurou­s audience and, especially, to Dudamel. With her arms around “the man I stalked around Europe,” she told Dudamel, “I’ve learned so much from you. You changed my life in two ways when you said, ‘Music is a fundamenta­l human right’ and ‘Our tradition is the future.’ ”

Orchestras are constituti­onally unfit in a hundred ways to be one big, happy family. But in the rare orchestra that has had warm relationsh­ips with management for decades, the players gave Borda a tusch, the brief flourish meant only for the most special of occasions and usually meant for another musician. Here it seemed in recognitio­n of what may be the least-appreciate­d secret by the outside world of Borda’s management style, however demanding, and how she developed lasting relations with artists, creating what she called an L.A. Phil family.

Dudamel never refers to the L.A. Phil as his orchestra but his family. And even Rasulo, whose life Borda has just made infinitely harder by creating the need for a replacemen­t, said to her on stage Thursday what I doubt any other board chair has ever said to a departing orchestra director: “Remember you always have a loving family here.”

Dudamel then conducted the orchestra and mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke in Mahler’s “RückertLie­der.” The last of the five songs is possibly the saddest and most beautiful song ever written: “I Am Lost to the World.”

 ?? Patrick T. Fallon For The Times IT’S OFF to New York for departing Philharmon­ic president and chief executive Deborah Borda. ??
Patrick T. Fallon For The Times IT’S OFF to New York for departing Philharmon­ic president and chief executive Deborah Borda.

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