Poster Venezuelan conductor and composer Jose Abreu
Venezuelan conductor and composer Jose Abreu delivers a speech to the young musicians of his orchestra in Caracas, Venezuela, in January 2009. Abreu was the founder of "El Sistema," an educational framework intended to extend musical instruction to children, regardless of their background.
Thomas Coex/AFP/Getty Images

Venezuelan conductor Jose Abreu envisioned musical education for all

Venezuelan musician, economist and educator José Abreu, who died in 2018, created the acclaimed network of youth orchestras known as El Sistema.

El Sistema, Abreu's globally lauded "system," with over 300 teaching locations, has taken hundreds of thousands of disadvantaged children in Venezuela under its wing, instructing them in classical music within numerous choirs and orchestras.

The El Sistema approach has been widely copied in Europe and North America and enthusiastically championed by Abreu's most successful protege, Gustavo Dudamel, the music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, who continues to tour the Venezuelan Youth Orchestra worldwide.

Dudamel said, "Maestro Abreu taught us that art is a universal right and that inspiration and beauty irreversibly transform the soul of a child." Dudamel got his start playing the violin in one of Abreu's youth orchestras, and by age 13 he was the assistant conductor of the local chamber orchestra. At 17 he was made music director of the Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra.

El Sistema, while separate from the Venezuelan government, has relied on state funding and has not been immune to the country's ongoing political upheaval. In 2017, Dudamel, in an open letter, spoke out against the hard line positions of Nicolas Maduro, saying "enough is enough." His letter came one day after reports were published in Venezuela that a young El Sistema violinist named Armando Canizales was killed in a Caracas street protest. Later, officials cancelled Dudamel's 2017 tour with the Venezuelan Youth Orchestra. "We are deeply moved by the physical departure … of Maestro Abreu," said Venezuelan President Maduro on state television, Reuters reported.

Abreu was born May 7, 1939, in Valera, Venezuela, where he began studying music at age nine, before moving to Caracas. At 25, Abreu was given the titles of master composer and teacher, according to his El Sistema biography. From there, he studied conducting and economics, a career path which afforded him inroads into governmental management, laying the groundwork for the foundation of Youth Orchestra of Venezuela, now known as the Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra.

With just a handful of students in an empty parking garage, Abreu began El Sistema in 1975.

"Since I was a boy in my early childhood, I always wanted to be a musician," Abreu said in his acceptance speech for the 2009 TED Prize, "and thank God, I made it. From my teachers, my family, and my community, I had all the necessary support to become a musician. All my life I've dreamed that all Venezuelan children would have the same opportunity I had."

He continued: "Today we can say that art in Latin America is no longer a monopoly of elites and that it has become a social right a right for all the people ... To sing and to play together means to intimately coexist."

Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit npr.org.

Love the music?

Donate by phone
1-800-562-8440

Show your support by making a gift to YourClassical.

Each day, we’re here for you with thoughtful streams that set the tone for your day – not to mention the stories and programs that inspire you to new discovery and help you explore the music you love.

YourClassical is available for free, because we are listener-supported public media. Take a moment to make your gift today.

More Ways to Give

Your Donation

$5/month
$10/month
$15/month
$20/month
$