Elena Dubinets heads to the Concertgebouw

Fantastic news from the Netherlands: Elena Dubinets has been named Artistic Director of the Concertgebouw Orchestra. Dubinets was a transformative force during her time at the Seattle Symphony, and now Amsterdam is about to see why.

During her Seattle days, Dubinets brought fresh ideas to programming that made the Symphony not just good but great. Remember when they commissioned John Luther Adams’ Become Ocean? That wasn’t just any new piece—it won the Pulitzer Prize and it helped reestablish the Seattle Symphony’s relevance.

I first encountered Dubinets’ work during my time as a student at the University of Iowa, though I didn’t realize it then. In the fall of 2000, she curated a Russian contemporary music festival, which Taruskin covered for The New York Times. I sat in the audience, captivated and wide-eyed, as I absorbed the unfamiliar sounds. Our paths crossed again years later when I briefly served on the board of the Seattle Chamber Players and later assisted her and the Seattle Symphony with visa applications for a group of artists who had limited experience performing in the United States.

She left Seattle during the pandemic—a loss for Seattle—and spent the last few years doing brilliant work with the London Philharmonic. Now, she’s heading to Amsterdam to work with Klaus Mäkelä, the Concertgebouw’s incoming music director. Mäkelä is already being hailed as one of the most exciting young conductors in the world and pairing him with Dubinets feels like a good match.