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Maya Beiser: ‘Goddess’ finds herself drawn to the afterlife

February 6, 2014 11:43
Maya Beiser: “I needed to find something that appeals to my generation. I wanted to take the cello into new realms”

By

Jessica Duchen,

Jessica Duchen

3 min read

The New Yorker once described Maya Beiser as a “cello goddess”, delighting the Israeli-born player so much that she adopted the phrase as her Twitter name. Now living in New York, she has forged a distinctive career path, making it her mission to transform the nature, perception and audience of cutting-edge contemporary music. And a London audience will get a taste of her playing later this month at the UK premiere of Pulitzer Prize-winning composer David Lang’s cello concerto World to Come.

Her Jewish identity, she says, remains key to her creativity. This spring, she also launches a project, All Vows, based on the Kol Nidre service, featuring commissions inspired by it from a range of composers.

Unusually for a classical musician, Beiser’s story begins on kibbutz. “My paternal grandparents left Ukraine for Argentina, where they settled in the Pampas and became Jewish Gauchos,” she recounts. Her father moved to Israel in the 1960s.“Our kibbutz was built in the Galilee by a group of Argentinian kids who believed they were going to change the world.”

Beiser’s gift for music was spotted when she was six, but she balked at the idea of learning the violin. “I needed to have my own individual voice, especially in that community — I wasn’t a tough kibbutznik. A lot of people started the violin, but nobody else played the cello. I’d heard my father’s Pablo Casals and Jacqueline du Pré recordings, so I said that was what I wanted to do.”

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