The Jerusalem Post

Timeless music from the heart

Khan Theatre airs the ‘Great American Songbook’

- • By BARRY DAVIS

Years ago I came across a joke book called something along the lines of You Don’t Have to Be Jewish to Enjoy a Jewish Joke But It Helps. By the same token, is it advisable to be Jewish to write a good musical number? Okay, that may be stretching the religious-cultural point a bit, but the sheer quantity of Jewish songwriter­s whose works made it into the Great American Songbook is striking.

That line of thought appears to be at the core of the Great American Songbook concert scheduled for May 30 (8 p.m.) at the Khan Theatre in Jerusalem. The yesteryear repertoire will be performed by Aviella Trapido, Hanan Leberman, Alona Cole, Guy Frati and Eric Guth. Frati – at 34, the youngest of the bunch – also serves as musical director.

The show blurb describes “a selection of great American hits from legendary composers, including Leonard Bernstein, Stephen Sondheim, Burt Bacharach, Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstei­n.” All were Jewish or of Jewish descent. Charts by iconic (non-Jewish) composer-lyricist Cole Porter are in the show mix too.

Guth – who doubles as producer of the Khan date – believes there are historical and logistical reasons for the Jewish propensity for songwritin­g and show business in general.

“There was a television documentar­y about Jews in the movies. They showed that the reason why Jews got into the movie business was because they owned live performanc­e theaters at the turn of the [20th] century and into the 1920s. The problem anyone that does live performanc­es has is getting reliable actors,” Guth explains.

They solved the problem by presenting celluloid that, once shot and in the can, was a done thing and required no more input from the thespians, reliable or otherwise.

Antisemiti­sm, and the need for Jews to up stakes and move on at the drop of a hat also led to a tendency to engage in occupation­s that allowed for a transitory migratory lifestyle. Music answers that go-with-theflow requiremen­t.

“Jews used portable things, like in Fiddler on the Roof,” Guth says, referencin­g the closing scene when the Jews are forced by the Russian authoritie­s to abandon their village.

“It was like being a musician or a lawyer, anything that

Jews went into was all very portable. They didn’t have infrastruc­ture that they had to drag around with them.”

And so, eventually, the

Great American Songbook came to be enriched by a slew of numbers written by first-generation American Jews, such as George and Ira Gershwin.

All of that, and much more, appealed to the 66-year-old American-born producer-vocalist who certainly has the personal collateral for his part in next week’s musical undertakin­g.

“I have always loved singing, and I come from a family of musicians,” Guth explains.

“My great uncle Bill used to run a big singing and voice school in Southern California. My twin brother teaches piano, bagpipes, and voice. He and his wife direct a chorus with 100 women, in the United States.”

After making aliyah in 2000, Guth decided to keep his musical ball rolling, taking an occasional part in production­s put on by the Jerusalem-based Encore Educationa­l Theater Company. That eventually begot the current project.

“While I was acting with Encore, I discovered that there are people in Jerusalem who, just like me, grew up listening to the American Songbook songs,” Guth notes.

“When they hear these songs, they get taken back in time to important memories in their lives. It is a special connection we have with these songs.”

Guth and his pals want to have fun on the Khan stage, spread the American musical word to the public and leave the patrons with a song or two in their hearts – and possibly, merrily humming an air at the end of the show, and a little better informed about how all this enduringly popular music came to be.

“In Jerusalem, we have our own version of the Great American Songbook,” says the bass-baritone.

“It’s a production where we perform these amazing American songs and also share some interestin­g stories and facts about the songs and the people who wrote them. Even if you grew up listening to these songs, you might not have known their origins or how they were created. Our goal is to make sure our audience leaves our performanc­e with happy memories and a tune on their lips as they go home.” Sounds good.

For tickets and more informatio­n: (02) 360-3600 and www. americanso­ngbook.info/

 ?? (Eric Guth) ?? ERIC GUTH hosts the weekly QSO Today Podcast.
(Eric Guth) ERIC GUTH hosts the weekly QSO Today Podcast.
 ?? (Brian Negrin/Encore) ?? ERIC GUTH in an Encore production of ‘Annie.’
(Brian Negrin/Encore) ERIC GUTH in an Encore production of ‘Annie.’

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