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Music

She's got a burning passion for that good old-time music

From klezmer to 18th-century opera, if it's got a past, Lucie Skeaping will uncover it

July 7, 2011 09:50
Performing Jewish pieces put Skeaping in touch with her roots

By

Judi Herman

3 min read

'I came to Jewish music in the only way I could, looking at it as early or traditional music. I came to it that way because I'm from a family that was not religious in anyway." So confides Lucie Skeaping, the musician and broadcaster who has carved a reputation as one of the country's most popular performers of Jewish music.

She studied violin and singing at the Royal College of Music and went on to study early music, starting the City Waites ensemble, specialising in 17th-century ballads, with her husband Roddy Skeaping.

And just as she began to wonder about her own heritage, "all sorts of incredible things happened at once", she says. "I was invited to do a documentary about Sephardi Jews to commemorate the 500th anniversary of the expulsion from Spain and the London School of Contemporary Dance asked if I'd organise some traditional Jewish music for a modern ballet."

This was in the late 1980s and the Skeapings went on to found their much-loved klezmer band, The Burning Bush. "We were perhaps the first to try to use instruments for both Sephardi and Ashkenazi music which would have been available at the time the music was originally performed. And it was only really through that that I started to be in touch with the Jewish community. People came up to me asking me things I didn't understand and so over the years I have investigated and feel I'm a little more knowledgeable about Jewish tradition in terms of the music."