Become a Member
Music

Noemi Gyori: This flute-player talks politics

February 2, 2017 12:06
for web.jpg
4 min read

Two things happened to Hungarian virtuoso flautist Noemi Gyori recently that could be a sign of frightening times. She lives in north London with her husband, fellow Hungarian, Gergely Madaras, himself a rising-star conductor, and their three year old daughter.

London is the latest and, so far, the longest stop for the couple since they left Hungary. Their careers have propelled them to some of Europe’s great centres of music, including Berlin, Munich — where Gyori took a soloist’s diploma — and Vienna, where she performed with the Vienna Philharmonic. She regularly returns to Munich to play with the Orchestra Jakobsplatz, founded in 2005 by the conductor Daniel Grossman, which specialises in Jewish music.

“I’m not religious, though I feel very strongly Jewish,” she says in English that is fluent, articulate and spoken with care to ensure her thoughts are communicated accurately. Her description of herself applies equally to many of the people from her life in Hungary, which she regularly visits to perform, record and visit her parents.

“I come from a Hungarian Jewish family. I’m basically surrounded by Jewish intellectuals and people who strongly value Jewish culture,” she says. And although the equivalent of this statement could be come from the daughters of any number of Jewish communities in the European diaspora, it’s hard not to place Gyori’s in the particular context of the dominant far right, antisemitic and anti-immigrant opinion that is currently to be found in her country.