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Esther Abrami: the violinist taking TikTok by storm

The musician has built a huge social media following in her quest to make classical music accessible to a younger and more diverse audience

October 6, 2023 13:05
Esther Abrami Pressefoto 2023 c Florian Saez (9)
5 min read

When Esther Abrami started uploading videos of her violin performances on TikTok at the age of 19, musicians from the classical arena were outraged. In a world of black tailcoats and velvet-seated concert halls, sharing her performance on social media was criticised as “cheap” and “vulgar”.

“It’s a very old-fashioned industry,” Paris-based Abrami says, with a sigh. “But I don’t blame them, because I was doing something new and that was scary to them.”

Abrami was steadfast in her quest to make classical music accessible to a younger and more diverse audience.

And now, aged 26, the concert violinist has built a rapidly expanding fanbase, with 415,000 followers on TikTok, 300,000 on YouTube, 265,000 on Instagram, 150,000 on Facebook — and counting.

In 2021, she was selected by Julian Lloyd Webber to feature in Classic FM’s “30 under 30 to watch”, and she’s the first classical musician to win the Social Media Superstar category at the Global Awards.

“To be recognised is wonderful because it all came from believing in what I really wanted, despite being criticised for it,” she says. “At the beginning, it was difficult, and I felt really depressed.”

After all, Abrami was on a mission to create a classical community in which she herself fit in, and where she could share music her own way. “I didn’t agree with the way things were done and how non-inclusive it could be,” she says. “The type of audience that we’re always getting at concerts, and the fact that we don’t clap, and we don’t talk.”

She continues, “In classical music you come and you sit down, and the people play, bow and leave. It seems like you’re not there. And I think that’s a shame. What’s lacking is the connection with the performers.”

If musicians can’t see it, she says, it’s just because they’re so used to it, and they’ve been taught that way. “But it always felt really odd to me.”

She recalls attempting to introduce her pieces in student concerns and being told: ‘No, that’s not the way you do it. You just go on stage and play and you leave.’ “I was really frustrated by that.”

Because of this, Abrami enjoys playing a broader spectrum of music and concerts — and having a classical background allows her to turn her bow to any other styles of music. Among her favourites in the crossover genres is electronic and orchestral fusion.