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How Jewish music helped me find my voice again

Mark Glanville believed a haemorrhage on his vocal chords had brought his singing career to an end...until he began picking up the liturgical melodies at Westminster Synagogue

February 27, 2024 17:50
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ByMark Glanville, Mark Glanville

3 min read

Berlin in the 1920s was the setting for my mother’s early childhood. After arriving in England in 1932 she never returned to Germany, but its culture, especially the music, remained with her. She bequeathed that heritage to me, sometimes in snatches of Schubert songs such as Heidenröslein and Erlkönig, settings of the German national poet Goethe, where pain and death, life’s unavoidable dues — as she well knew — were never far below the surface.

Mark's mother with her family in pre-war Berlin[Missing Credit]

Aged 16, I invested in an LP of the great Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau singing Schubert settings of Goethe to Gerald Moore’s accompaniment. They illuminated my adolescent angst, transfiguring my pain, through art, into something healing, even joyful. I started to explore more classical vocal music, one day singing a phrase of Prince Gremin’s aria from Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin to my clarinet teacher, Marjorie Dutton. She exclaimed, ‘You have a voice!’ and sent me off to work with Mark Raphael, a distinguished former recitalist, now in his eighties, who had himself performed with Gerald Moore. I had a place to read Classics at Pembroke College, Oxford, but the thought I might make a career in singing intoxicated me.

At Oxford I performed a recital with the college organist, the today renowned David Titterington. In it I gave vent to the sufferings of love, in songs by Schubert and others. In exchange, I received a letter from the Professor of Anglo-Saxon, Eric Stanley, telling me it was the most moving concert he had experienced. Similar missives followed. If nothing else, I realised I could communicate raw emotion through song. It was cathartic for me and also my audience. But my singing voice was embryonic and untrained, something a few years at music college would surely remedy. Sir Geoffrey Arthur, Master of Pembroke, arranged for me to sing to his friend, the well-known baritone Thomas Hemsley, who in turn set up an audition for me at the Royal Northern College of Music.