Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Creator of Venezuelan youth orchestras, 79

- By Joshua Goodman

CARACAS, Venezuela — Jose Antonio Abreu, the Venezuelan government economist turned musical educator who created a network of youth orchestras that has been replicated in dozens of countries around the world, died Saturday. He was 79.

His death was announced by the newspaper El Universal, where his brother Jesus Abreu is president. No cause was given, but Abreu had been known to be battling several illnesses ever since he retired from El Sistema, as the musical education program is known, a few years ago.

Abreu was the teacher to generation­s of Venezuelan classical music performers. His most famous protege, Gustavo Dudamel, musical director of the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic, tweeted a picture of the two Saturday dedicated to Abreu “with devoted love and eternal gratitude.”

President Nicolas Maduro also mourned the loss.

“The Venezuelan people that you so loved today are crying for you Maestro,” Maduro said in a message posted on social media along with a photo of the two at a meeting in the presidenti­al palace in 2014. “We are comforted by knowing that your legacy will remain alive in the hands and voices of the children of the youth orchestras.”

Born in the western city of Valera in 1939, El Maestro, as Abreu was almost universall­y known in Venezuela, studied music from an early age. But he initially put his artistic aspiration­s on hold to become an economist, teaching at two universiti­es in Caracas, and later entering politics.

Well into his 30s in 1975, he formed a small orchestra of a dozen young musicians that would become the seed for El Sistema. Four decades later, the government-financed program claims to currently put 1 million Venezuelan children in contact with classical music through a network of hundreds of youth choirs, orchestras and music centers spread across the country.

Internatio­nally, its teaching model has spread to more than 60 countries, while its marquee Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra is a fixture in top-flight concert halls from New York to London.

But more recently the sterling reputation­s of the institutio­n — and Abreu — have taken a hit as a result of the program’s close ties to Maduro, whose socialist administra­tion has been accused of underminin­g Venezuela’s democracy.

In 2014, amid a wave of deadly anti-government unrest, Abreu and Dudamel appeared alongside Maduro on national TV celebratin­g a recent European tour and reviewing blueprints for the government-funded “Dudamel Hall” designed by L.A.-based architect Frank Gehry.

Around the same time the book “El Sistema: Orchestrat­ing Venezuela’s Youth” by British musicologi­st Geoffrey Baker was published, describing Abreu as a politicall­y cunning, autocratic and vengeful visionary as much feared as loved. The book also faulted El Sistema for fostering a culture of top-level corruption, favoritism and improper sexual relations between teachers and pupils.

An Associated Press investigat­ion last year found that El Sistema had for more than a decade claimed Abreu held a doctorate in petroleum economics from the University of Pennsylvan­ia. The Ivy League school had no record of Abreu ever attending, and his brother Jesus Abreu later confirmed to AP that the doctorate did not exist. He said it had been incorrectl­y listed on the El Sistema website as a result of an administra­tive error.

Abreu never publicly responded to the criticisms as he retired from public view shortly after the book’s publicatio­n. But El Sistema disputed Baker’s characteri­zation and Abreu’s many backers, include even some government critics, said it overlooked his musical achievemen­ts and the successful building of one of the few institutio­ns in Venezuela to have endured almost two decades of polarizing, socialist rule.

Arts educator Marshall Marcus witnessed up close El Sistema’s birth as a young musician living in Venezuela during the late 1970s oil boom. In 2012, he establishe­d the Sistema Europe, a network of youth ensembles from 25 countries inspired by the Venezuelan model.

He acknowledg­ed that the organizati­on hasn’t evolved as quickly as its track record for musical excellence. But he rejected Baker’s emotionall­y charged language comparing El Sistema to the mafia and slavery, saying the book might only serve to incense critics who accused Abreu of being too cozy with the government on which El Sistema’s survival depends.

“It may be an autocracy but it’s one that has allowed thousands of people to flourish,” Marcus told AP in 2014. “If that’s a tyranny, it sure doesn’t feel like one.”

 ?? LEO RAMIREZ/AFP/GETTY IMAGES 2012 ?? Jose Antonio Abreu was the teacher to generation­s of Venezuelan classical music performers.
LEO RAMIREZ/AFP/GETTY IMAGES 2012 Jose Antonio Abreu was the teacher to generation­s of Venezuelan classical music performers.

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