Become a Member
Life

Yasmin Levy: one day, I'll make an album with no Ladino on it

The Israeli singer is known for reviving Sephardi culture. But she fears being stuck in a musical ghetto

October 11, 2012 09:04
Levy prefers not singing in her native Hebrew. “It’s the language in which I buy milk and bread”

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

3 min read

When Yasmin Levy was signed up by her manager Paul Burger more than a decade ago, he joked that she would be unlikely to sell more than 128 records. You could understand why. After all, here was an unknown vocalist who specialised in singing half-forgotten songs in the language of Ladino — the Judeo-Spanish of the Sephardi world which is spoken by fewer than 150,000 people.

Levy, it is safe to say, has sold many more than 128 albums since then. Now onto her sixth CD, she has a worldwide following and has chalked up television appearances on innumerable shows, including Later with Jools Holland, and has performed at the Sydney Opera House and other major venues around the world.
In doing so she has played a major part in popularising ancient songs sung in one of Europe’s more obscure languages. The reason for her success? A peek at any of her videos on YouTube will give you the answer to that one. Levy has the kind of exotic beauty and powerful, soulful voice that could bring passion and romance to the adverts for plumbers in the Yellow Pages.

She could probably have achieved success in rock, pop or jazz but she maintains that her career chose her rather than the other way around. Her father, Yitzhak Levy, was a renowned musicologist who spent much of his career collecting Ladino songs and preserving them — in many cases recording them himself. He died when his youngest daughter, Yasmin, was still a baby, but she grew up with his influence and, in particular, his songs.

She recalls: “When I was young there was an evening held in my father’s memory. I sang one song and this turned my world upside down. Before that I had wanted to be a singer and be famous. But I felt so connected to those songs I decided I had to perform them. My brothers and sisters said: ‘Why do you want to sing in Ladino? No one will listen to you’. I said: ‘I’m going to show you that people will listen’.”

Editor’s picks