Become a Member
Life

The music plays on in memory of Myra

Wartime concerts have inspired a new series of classical recitals

February 11, 2022 03:38
MyraHess-creditLibbieFoster
4 min read

During the Second World War, the Luftwaffe battered London with wave after wave of bombs. Undeterred, the Jewish pianist Myra Hess played concerts to enraptured audiences every lunchtime.
On Wednesday 6 November 1940 she played Beethoven’s Piano Trio in C minor at the National Gallery. That autumn the bombings came on 56 out of 57 days between September and November. But nothing stopped Hess. Since she had started the series in October 1939, just a few weeks after the outbreak of the Second World War, her unwavering commitment resulted in almost 2000 concerts spanning the six-and-a-half-year duration of the war and well beyond.
Eighty years on, the classical music group the Nash Ensemble is presenting a celebration series in her honour, performing some of the pieces from the famous lunchtime war recitals that she organised, and in which she often performed.
The series has been created by the Nash Ensemble’s founder and artistic director Amelia Freedman. A great admirer of the famous pianist, she went to the British Library to select the most appropriate programmes for the series. When she researched the musical pieces during 2019 there was no sign of a global pandemic. By the time the programme started the pandemic was in full force, unexpectedly bearing comparison to the duress experienced in the War.


“I was a great admirer of Myra Hess and thought the lunchtime concerts gave so much solace to people who were having to endure hardship during the blitz,” says Freedman, 81, a member of Hendon United Synagogue.
Hess was born in 1890 to Jewish parents living in South Hampstead. An accomplished pianist of international repute, she was about to embark on her most extensive tour yet in the US when hostilities broke out. Instead, she decided to stay at home in the UK for the duration of the war.
“We are facing the annihilation of everything we hold important,” she wrote, “And this wonderful opportunity to give spiritual solace to those who are giving all to combat the evil seems, in some mysterious way, to have been given into my hands.”
She referred to the National Gallery concerts as her “national service”, seeing them as a way of satisfying the “hunger of the spirit” she sensed all around her in the early months of the war.
They were also an answer to another, more practical, problem: how the nation’s musicians could support their families after the closure of London’s concert halls and theatres. Moreover, the concerts satisfied a long-held ambition of hers to make classical music available to all — for just a shilling.
Working on the project was “an honour” for Freedman. A pianist and professional clarinet player herself, her passion for music is, as she puts it, “my life”. She fondly recalls her time as a teacher, taking pupils from Chorleywood College for blind children, to classical concerts. When studying at the Royal Academy of Music she regularly organised the students to play at chamber music concerts. This prompted her to set up the Nash Ensemble when she was just 24 years old, named after the Nash terraces around the Royal Academy of Music in central London.
“I had a talent for organising and encouraging my fellow students to take part in concerts, I was able to make them happen,” she recalls. “I was told The Nash Ensemble wouldn’t last more than six months. That was 57 years ago!”