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Music

Israel's orchestra celebrates but sounds a note of caution

The Israel Philharmonic marked its 75th birthday with star-studded concerts, and questions about the future

January 12, 2012 11:31
The orchestra rehearses during the Gulf War in 1991, with gas masks at the ready by each chair in case of missile attack

By

Jenni Frazer,

Jenni Frazer

4 min read

It was, in the end, left to the long-time music director of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Zubin Mehta, to put his finger on what was being celebrated.

On a cool, clear night in Tel Aviv last month, Maestro Mehta, himself celebrating 50 years with the IPO, led hundreds of international patrons and well-wishers in a rousing chorus of "Happy Birthday, dear Philharmonic", as the orchestra marked its 75th anniversary.

But as the cheers died down, it was Mehta who reminded his audience of the very real human sacrifices which had been made when the orchestra was founded in 1936 by violinist Bronislaw Huberman. Huberman, who famously persuaded Arturo Toscanini to conduct that first concert on December 26, 1936, had paid, "out of his own pocket", recalled Mehta, "for around 80 musicians and their families to come from Europe". They became what was originally the Palestine Philharmonic Orchestra and, by Huberman's action, were certainly rescued from the Holocaust. "Many more did not make it," said Mehta, asking his audience to remember those doomed musicians.

It was a telling reminder of the founding of a unique orchestra, which in its 75th year is undergoing yet another convulsion and transformation - almost taking it back to its roots. In those first uncertain days, the Polish-born Huberman was faced with creating an orchestra out of a Babel of European individuals. The main languages spoken were "German, Polish, Hungarian and Russian, with a little Hebrew spoken by the youngsters". These days, of course, there is a fair amount of Russian spoken among the 107 permanent members, although both the longest-serving musician, trumpet player Ilan Eshed, who has been with the orchestra since 1968, and its newest member, principal bassoon player Daniel Mazaki, who joined just last October, are both Israeli-born.

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