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My mother made me into a musician

As he prepares to conduct Nabucco, Verdi’s opera about Jewish exile, Joy Sable meets the Israeli musician Daniel Oren

December 16, 2021 10:57
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6 min read


Most operas are famous for a tuneful aria or two; the audience waits for the lead tenor or soprano to belt out the melody and often judge the entire work on that song alone. Verdi’s Nabucco stands out in that its most recognisable tune — Va Pensiero, or the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves — is not sung by one of the leads but by the opera’s chorus. What a beautiful tune it is; a lyrical lament with a stage filled with voices pining for the lost land of Israel.


“For the Italians it is a metaphor, for we Jewish people it is not a metaphor – we always pray ‘l’shanah haba Yerushalayim’,” says Daniel Oren, the Israeli conductor who will be taking the podium when the Royal Opera begins a short season of Nabucco at Covent Garden next week.
Works by Verdi and Puccini hold a special place in Oren’s heart, as he spent the early years of his career as musical director at the Rome Opera. He is currently artistic and musical director at the Teatro Verdi in Salerno but is in high demand throughout the world as a conductor. At present, he will not conduct the works of the virulent antisemite Wagner, but he does not rule out the possibility at some point in the future.


Born in Tel Aviv, he did not choose music as a career — his mother chose it for him. Originally from Poland, she studied philosophy and psychology at the Sorbonne in Paris but dedicated her life to turning her son into a musician. She encouraged Oren to study the piano, cello and singing. As a young singer he was picked to work with Leonard Bernstein when he visited Israel in 1968 to perform his Chichester Psalms.


“Bernstein was one of the biggest geniuses in the world,” says Oren. “His way of communicating music was unique, something exceptional. He was a fantastic man, he was a mensch.” While other conductors would secrete themselves in their rooms during rehearsal intervals, Bernstein was keen to chat to members of the orchestra. “He knew everything about everybody. There was not only great genius in this man, but great humanity.”