Gustavo Dudamel has received a $1 million unrestricted grant for the Dudamel Foundation through a new award created by trumpeter, producer, and philanthropist Herb Alpert. The honor is not just about classical music, star power, or a famous name handing a check to another famous name.
At its center is a bigger idea. Can music help young people think for themselves, listen to others, and build a better life? For Alpert and Dudamel, the answer is yes, but only if education stays at the heart of the work.
A new award with a clear purpose
The new Herb Alpert Honor gives its first award to Dudamel and the foundation that carries his name. The Dudamel Foundation will use the $1 million grant to support music learning, arts education, and cultural exchange for young people.
This is different from the long-running Herb Alpert Award in the Arts, which gives $75,000 each year to mid-career artists in dance, film and video, music, theater, and visual arts. That prize began in 1994 and is funded by the Herb Alpert Foundation.
The new honor goes further in scale and focus. It recognizes artists whose work reaches beyond the stage and into communities, classrooms, and the lives of young people.

Two musicians, one belief
Alpert and Dudamel come from very different worlds. Alpert was born in Los Angeles, while Dudamel grew up in Barquisimeto, Venezuela, about 3,700 miles away.
Their ages, languages, and musical paths are different too. But both learned early that music can open a door, especially for children who may not have many doors open to them.
In the interview material, Alpert said he has followed Dudamel’s work for years and admired the way he inspires young musicians. Dudamel, in turn, described Alpert as a guide in generosity, art, and the power of music to bring people together.
More than entertainment
Dudamel is now in a major transition. He has led the Los Angeles Philharmonic for years and is preparing to become the New York Philharmonic’s music and artistic director in September 2026.
That move makes the timing of the award even more striking. It arrives as Dudamel looks back on his long chapter in Los Angeles and prepares for a new one in New York.
For him, the grant is not only financial. He described it as a spiritual recognition of the idea that music can shape people, not just entertain them.
What music gives young people
The Dudamel Foundation, led by Dudamel and Spanish actor María Valverde, focuses on programs that place young people inside music, not just in front of it. That means learning, performing, exchanging ideas, and meeting others from different backgrounds.
In practical terms, this is not about turning every child into a professional violinist or conductor. It is about giving them tools to listen, question, collaborate, and build confidence.
Alpert put it simply in the source interview. He said he wants children to learn “not what to think, but how to think.” That line may sound modest, but it carries the whole point of the award.
Lessons from an orchestra
Dudamel often uses the orchestra as an example of how difference can become harmony. On a stage, musicians may disagree about sound, technique, rhythm, or interpretation.
But the work does not collapse because of that. For the most part, those differences become part of the final performance.
That is the metaphor he wants young people to experience. In a noisy world full of arguments, music can teach a quieter skill, how to disagree and still create something together.
Alpert’s own path
Alpert knows something about mixing cultures and sounds. In the 1960s, he became famous with Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass, a group whose style drew partly from Mexican brass sounds he heard during a visit to Tijuana.
He did not try to copy mariachi music. Instead, he blended influences into something bright, popular, and unmistakably his own.
That background helps explain why he sees music as a meeting place. A song can bring together people who may vote differently, live differently, or speak differently, and for a few minutes, they are listening to the same thing.
Education at the center
Dudamel traces much of his belief in music to José Antonio Abreu, the Venezuelan teacher and musician behind El Sistema, the youth music education movement that shaped Dudamel’s childhood.
He has often said that he is the result of a dream. That dream was simple but ambitious, giving young people a way to build a life through music.
Now, with this award, Dudamel has another chance to multiply that opportunity. At the end of the day, that is what the $1 million is trying to do.
A shared message
Alpert said music has enough power that good things can come from it. Dudamel agreed, but added that culture and education must be treated as foundations, not luxuries.
Technology keeps moving fast. But without reflection, empathy, and the ability to listen, progress can feel hollow.
That is why both men keep returning to young people. “We can change the world,” Dudamel said in the source material, but it starts with what society gives to the next generation.
The official announcement has been published by the Dudamel Foundation.










