The Jewish Chronicle

Pianist is going to shul to launch concert series

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TEL AVIV-BORN Inon Barnatan has won acclaim as one of the world’s most soughtafte­r young pianists. In his mid-30s, he has conquered America, being recently announced as the New York Philharmon­ic’s first Associate Artist. But his appearance at the Central Synagogue in London’s Great Portland Street next Wednesday will be his first shul performanc­e.

It opens Central’s Internatio­nal Concerts Series — in partnershi­p with the JC — which features stars of the classical world and music with a Jewish influence. Barnatan will play Schubert’s magnificen­t final two sonatas and Israeli Avner Dorman’s restless Nocturne Insomniaqu­e, composed especially for him.

No prizes for spotting the Jewish connection with Dorman, but with Schubert it’s more complex. The great composer actually set Psalm 92 for the Vienna Synagogue and, it is thought, studied Hebrew for the occasion with its famous cantor, Salomon Sulzer. And his Ninth Symphony was premiered with Mendelssoh­n conducting.

“The mesh of the brain and the heart, the feeling and the scholarshi­p is what I find most interestin­g about Judaism,” Barnatan says. “In Schubert, too, you never have one without the other, the expressivi­ty and the structure. So in that way you might define something about it as Jewish, and that’s why he probably felt called to set a Jewish song.

“Take the A major sonata, which I’ll play in London. It’s an architectu­ral marvel, the way that themes appear and return and interlock. It’s like this huge monument, but then it also contains probably the most strikingly unstructur­ed moment in the whole classical romantic period — in the middle of the second movement, where everything just collapses. All pretence of reason. It all folds into a sort of human desperatio­n. And the juxtaposit­ion of that and the structure around it make a huge impact and defines the entire piece.”

Isn’t that also a descriptio­n of the Jewish year? A heavily structured calendar, carefully ordered services, and then on Kol Nidre everything just stops. “One of the hallmarks of great art is that it contains a lot of human existence,” Barnatan reflects. “In one way it is universal and in another very personal. So it’s very possible to find those kinds of echoes.”

Especially in an iconic synagogue like the Central? “Probably. When I play this music in a synagogue for the first time, what the place is used for, and its history, will influence how I understand it.”

‘GREAT ART CONTAINS A LOT OF HUMAN EXISTENCE’

Inon Barnatan plays Wide-Awake Schubert at the Central Synagogue on September 10 at 7pm. 020 7580 1355 . Quote the code “JC” to get 20 per cent discount

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