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David D’Or: Meet Israel’s classical hero

July 17, 2008 23:00

By

Paul Lester,

Paul Lester

2 min read

David D’Or has sung for the Pope and Bill Clinton.


David D’Or is Israel’s Charlotte Church — only, obviously, he is male, and not married to a rugby player. But he is his nation’s best-known classical singer and has, over the years, performed for everyone from the Pope and the King of Thailand to Nelson Mandela and Bill Clinton. Not surprisingly, he believes his music can make a difference.

“At a show in the Canary Islands, I sang a traditional Jewish song called Lecha Dodi,” he says, “and there were these young Palestinians holding a huge Palestinian flag, dancing with it above their heads. It was exciting. It was like having peace through music.”

The great-grandson of a prominent Libyan rabbi and descendant of a family of Jews expelled from Spain during the Inquisition, D’Or, now 42, was trained at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance. He served as a singer in the Israeli army band and in 1985 was in the Israeli Army Central Command troops’ entertainment group. After completing his national service, he enrolled in the Jerusalem Conservatory and began his career as a classical tenor.

Since then, he has represented Israel at the Eurovision Song Contest — “The newspapers asked the people of Israel who they wanted and they chose me,” he says of the gaudy pop fest, “but I didn’t like it at all” — and, through his music, has been an unofficial ambassador for the country. “I do my best to speak about my beloved country,” he says, “to describe things the way they look to us here, because from abroad it seems different. I would like to emphasise the beautiful things, such as the cultural life, not just the bombs and the fear.”