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Liza Fertschman: I’m not a typical violinist, I wanted to be a singer

“I sometimes blame my parents for making me play the violin,” says musician Liza Fertschman. “My father’s a cellist and my mother’s a pianist, so they wanted a piano trio.”

May 24, 2018 11:57
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2 min read

A contribution to the Leonard Bernstein centenary celebrations recently grabbed me by the guts. It’s a recording by the Dutch violinist Liza Fertschman of the composer’s Serenade: a concerto that aims to capture impressions of love according to the Greek philosophers depicted in Plato’s Symposium.

The disc, on Challenge Classics, pairs it with the Korngold Violin Concerto, uniting two works by composers whose Jewish heritage runs deep in their music, whether by accident or design. This month Ferschtman, herself of Russian Jewish origin, is performing the Bernstein in London.

“The first time I heard the Serenade, I was captivated,” Ferschtman remembers. “What drew me in was the quality of speaking he creates in it. It’s something I always search for: the ability to speak through the music, not just sing wordlessly.” Opportunity knocked five years ago when she was asked to replace the indisposed Janine Jansen in a concert performance of the piece: “I had to learn it in one week!”

Ferschtman’s background chimes well with Bernstein’s: “I read an interview with Bernstein’s daughter, saying that at Passover and Easter they’d have a Seder night and the next day an egg hunt,” she says. “That’s how modern Jews roll! You have Christmas with a Christmas tree, but a Chanukah menorah as well. That’s pretty much how I grew up.”