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Music

Jews who really got them going

November 27, 2014 12:27
Ruthless: American Alan Klein helped to turn The Kinks into one of our greatest pop groups

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

4 min read

There is embedded in our culture an oft-repeated story about pop music and it goes something like this: a brilliant talent, usually from a working-class background is discovered by a wealthy agent who exploits the hitherto unknown hopeful to the hilt. Then, because the talent doesn't read or understand the small print in the contract, he, she or they end up producing material for which they get paid very little if anything at all, while the parasites who signed them continue to rake in the proceeds.

Or so the story goes. Oh, there is one other element to the legend. The agent is often Jewish.

Two recent stage productions have latched on to this element of what might be called a myth. In Epstein, a small but powerful play by Andrew Sherlock subtitled The Man Who Made the Beatles, the Jewish fixer is centre stage. While in The Kinks' new musical, Sunny Afternoon, a conspicuous sub-plot of the show concerns Austrian refugee Edward Kassner, the man who made The Kinks.

The show is driven by Ray Davies's music, of course, but it still gives Kassner (played by Ben Caplan) space to tell his refugee-made-good story. He survived the Holocaust. His family didn't. Next to the show's two English toff buffoons who were first to represent Davies and The Kinks, Kassner comes across pretty sympathetically.