I Belong to Glazgoy
Musician and researcher Phil Alexander pieces together the story of Russian born Jewish synagogue cantor, Isaac Hirshow, who landed in Glasgow a century ago.
Klezmer musician and scholar of Jewish culture, Dr Phil Alexander is on the southside of Glasgow, looking for clues to a man whose music he鈥檚 spent five years piecing together. Isaac Hirshow, a virtuosic Russian Jewish synagogue cantor and composer, arrived in the Gorbals from Warsaw in 1922. He was one of thousands of Jewish immigrants who landed here, just south of the river Clyde, where Yiddish voices mingled with Gaelic and Irish airs, Lithuanian laments, and Italian arias.
A hundred years ago, it would have been easy to find Isaac - Phil could have gone to the Jewish Institute or to Chevra Kadisha Synagogue on Oxford Street where Isaac worked. Today, however, much of Hirshow鈥檚 Gorbals has been bulldozed, and although we can鈥檛 walk those streets any more, we can build a picture through the emotional traces that persist in memory, and the physical traces left in archives.
Music is how Phil met Isaac Hirshow. But it was music in limbo, held in an archive, unplayed - just black marks on the page. Phil has spent the last five years bringing it to life, ready to receive its very first performance. But he also wants to understand the man who wrote it and the hybrid Scottish / Jewish identity he built for himself in the city known to Jews of the time as Glazgoy.
As Phil excavates Hirshow鈥檚 story through archive, oral history, poetry, early recordings and specially performed music, he connects with musician, former refugee and migration scholar Aref Ghorbani and Chilean singer Valentina Montoya-Martinez. All three are well versed in using music to find common ground, and together they use the musical themes from The Hope of Israel to situate Hirshow鈥檚 music in a new age of community building and culture in transit.
Presenter: Dr Phil Alexander
Contributors: Harvey Kaplan, Eddie Binnie, Natasha Lange
Musicians:
Valentina Montoya-Martinez (singer) Aref Ghorbani (singer and setar), Phil Alexander (piano and accordion)
University of Glasgow Chapel Choir, directed by Katy Lavinia Cooper
Special thanks to University of Glasgow Archive & Special Collection, Ellen Galford
Produced by Freya Hellier
A Prospect Street production for 麻豆社 Radio 4
Last on
Broadcasts
- Sun 6 Aug 2023 16:30麻豆社 Radio 4
- Sun 13 Aug 2023 00:15麻豆社 Radio 4