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The cellist who loves chazanut

Sonia Wieder-Atherton says Chasidic singers know how to put emotion into music

March 10, 2011 10:44
Cellist Sonia Wieder-Atherton tracked down liturgical melodies in France and Israel

By

Jessica Duchen,

Jessica Duchen

2 min read

Jewish liturgical music will get the classical treatment next week when the American-French cellist, Sonia Wieder-Atherton, brings her extraordinary concert, called Chants Juifs, to London.

The concert (the CD version of which is already out) started life when the film-maker Chantal Akerman asked Wieder-Atherton to work on music for her Histoires d'Amerique, a series of filmed monologues exploring the experiences of Jewish eastern European immigrants in the United States. Researching suitable material, Wieder-Atherton found herself increasingly drawn to the singing of cantors and the spiritual power of Chasidic music.

"It is really liturgic, but with moments of joy, because that's what the Baal Shem Tov - the founder of Chasidic Judaism - brought to the Jewish religion," she says. "He was a revolutionary. He said that you should welcome God in dancing, believe in God in singing, enjoy every passing day. It was fantastic! And of course, it also influenced the music."

Wieder-Atherton explored sources in libraries in Paris and Jerusalem, but was most intrigued by the word-of-mouth connections that came to light as she worked. "Sometimes people would sing me one or two lines of a song, and then I'd find the same themes in a book in the Paris library, but the melody would be developed in another way. Those were fascinating moments: I could recognise the same themes being used differently in different parts of the world. Next I listened to some extraordinary cantors and studied the way they develop a phrase, which helped me to build the structure of those pieces."