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By

Daniel Snowman,

Daniel Snowman

Opinion

Where is the Jewish Pavarotti?

History contains a multitude of outstanding musical Jews but there is one glaring gap. Why?

October 7, 2010 10:34
2 min read

When I was a child, shortly after the war, I remember asking why so many famous violinists were Jewish and being told that Jews had often been on the run and that you could always take your fiddle with you. There was some truth to this. The Yidl Mitn Fidl, like the fiddler on the roof, was the stuff of Jewish legend, and it became reality when (for example) three of the future members of the Amadeus Quartet fetched up in London from Nazi Vienna with no special aptitude other than the ability to play the violin.

But if the violin was portable, surely the voice was even more so? When my parents took me to my first opera, and to Gigli concerts at the Royal Albert Hall, I wondered why there were so few famous Jewish opera singers. Sixty-odd years later, it's about time I tried to answer the question.

Think of a famous Jewish "classical" musician over the past century or two. Hordes of names spring to mind: pianists such as Rubinstein, Horovitz, Schnabel and Barenboim and violinists from Joachim, Kreisler and Heifetz to Menuhin, Stern, Perlman and beyond. The list is endless, as is that of celebrated composers and conductors with Jewish backgrounds (Mendelssohn, Meyerbeer, Offenbach, Mahler, Walter, Klemperer, Gershwin, Bernstein etc).

But what about top opera singers? A handful of starry names suggest themselves: a few recent Americans (Merrill, Peerce, Tucker, Sills), some Central and Eastern Europeans from a little earlier (Kipnis, Schorr, Schmidt, Tauber) and one or two from further back still. Opera history has of course been graced by far more Jewish singers than this. But among the absolutely stellar figures those from Jewish backgrounds form an appreciatively smaller cohort than those excelling in other forms of musical performance. Caruso, Gigli, Patti, Melba and Callas were not Jewish, nor Sutherland, Pavarotti, Domingo, Fleming or Flórez.

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