Today in Israeli History

Composer Menachem Avidom Passes Away

August 5, 2022

August 5, 1995

Menachem Avidom was born on January 6, 1908 in Stanislav, Russia.  He immigrated to Mandate Palestine in 1925. A cousin of famed composer Gustav Mahler, he studied music and composition at the American University Beirut and the Paris Conservatoire.  After completing his studies, Avidom taught music at the Tel-Aviv Teacher Training College and the Tel-Aviv Conservatory.  He also worked as a music critic.  His time studying in Beirut combined with a four-year stint in Egypt later led him to look beyond European modes on musical theory and composition.

Avidom began to work with “a-tonal” modes, and in 1939 wrote musical arrangements for Yemenite-Jewish singer Bracha Zefira.  These arrangements sparked his interest in the fusion of Middle Eastern and European music theories, and in 1944 he began to write a series of pieces in the new style that defined the rest of his career as a composer. His compositions helped lay the groundwork for future Mizrahi and Sephardic (Middle Eastern Jewish) musicians in Israel. The pieces of this era included his 1944 “Flute Concerto”; 1945 Symphony No.1, “Amamit” (Folk Symphony); and 1951 Symphony number 3, “Yam ha’Tichonit” (Mediterranean Symphony).

In addition to the innovative work as a composer that continued throughout his career, Avidom served as the General Secretary of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (1946-1952), Advisor on the Arts to the Ministry of Tourism (1952-1955), Chair of the Israeli Composers’ League (1958-1971), and General Director of ACUM, the Israeli Performing Arts Society (1955-1980).  Avidom received the Israeli Prize for music in 1961.

In the photo, Menachem Avidom presents Albert Einstein a copy of his symphony number 2 “David” 1949. (National Library of Israel)

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