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The concerts you shouldn’t miss

Jewish performers and composers are well represented in the Proms season.

July 16, 2009 13:35
Natalie clein: playing Bach

By

Rodney Greenberg

1 min read

Jewish performers and composers are well represented in the Proms season, which starts tonight.

Perhaps the biggest name among the performers is Daniel Barenboim, who is conducting three concerts with his Jewish-Arab West-Eastern Divan Orchestra — two on August 21 (his violinist son Michael also takes part), plus Beethoven’s only opera, Fidelio, the following day.

The Hungarian-Jewish conductor Ivan Fischer begins his Budapest Festival Orchestra concert with Prokofiev’s klezmer-tinged Overture on Hebrew Themes (August 18), while 83-year-old Charles Mackerras (a descendant of the composer Isaac Nathan) conducts Elgar, Delius and Holst (July 25), and Gilbert and Sullivan’s Patience (August 11).
Zubin Mehta — Parsi-born but, in his words, “Jewish by osmosis” thanks to his long association with the Israel Philharmonic — conducts the Vienna Philharmonic (September 11).

Two British cellists appear twice: Steven Isserlis (August 24, 28) playing works by Schumann, Mendelssohn and Tchaikovsky, and Natalie Clein (August 29, 31), who is performing Delius, Bach and Villa-Lobos.
Lithuanian Julian Rachlin plays the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto (August 10) while his fellow Baltic musician, the Latvian Gidon Kremer, plays the one by Philip Glass (August 12).

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