104 Friday, September 21, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS You mean I can be a composer?" exclaimed the young pianist. And with that, young Chajes sat down and wrote his first composition. It is a composi- tion his young piano students still love to play. He sits down at one of his two grand pianos, this one a Steinway, and demonstrates that simple mazurka. It is both lovely and lively. "I didn't know how to write music so my friend wrote it down," he recalls. "Two days later I wrote another composition, a lullabye, and you know who wrote it down for me? My father. And he wrote an intro- duction to it." His father, Joseph, a respected physician and chief of the Jewish hospital in Lwow, had studied violin and was a great lover of music. Chajes' mother, Valerie, was an amateur pianist and her son's first piano teacher when he was 6. Equally as important as piano les- sons, she gave her son great confi- dence. When I said to her, look I'm the smallest in my class,' " remembers Chajes, "she said: 'Beethoven and Goethe and Napoleon were small too. Sunday's concert by the Center Symphony Orchestra marks several milestones for E composer, pianist and conductor Julius Chajes lived in Vienna his father and brother remained in Poland while his mother commuted back and forth. When thE family finally moved to Vienna in 1926, Dr. Chajes established a privatE practice and invested in real estate. Young Julius wrote his first string quartet at the age of 11 and at 15 played his Fantasy For Piano and Orchestra with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra. At 16, Chajes attended public school for the first time in Vienna Prior to that, his father had engaged private tutors to educate his son. La. ter, Chajes attended Vienna Univer sity and studied conducting at thE Vienna Conservatory of Music. As I 21-year-old composer, he could boast 20 published compositions. But onE' year after he was awarded the Honor Prize of the City of Vienna, in 1933 al the First International Competition for Pianists, Chajes gave a farewell concert at which the world reknownec Rose Quartet performed two of his string quartets. That concert must have beer painful for Chajes, who left to join his parents in Palestine and realized at the time his career plans might undergo drastic change. His parents hadn't really wanted to leave their be loved Vienna. It was only at their son's insistence that they did so. They had been so content with the quality of lifE they had discovered in Vienna, boa materially and culturally, that the:, had closed their eyes to the rising and overt anti-Semitism around them. Julius, however, did not. He could not shake from his memory the pogroms he had witnessed as a 7-year-old ir Poland. And Julius' brother Richard had returned from Vienna University shaken and frightened, with an ac- count of how some Jewish students were roughed up by Nazi soldiers. He had escaped by jumping from e second-story window. Chajes discusses his feelings o1 apprehension in those days: "I believed that Hitler would corn. to Vienna because I noticed that thE population was very anti-Semitic . . increasingly so and they looked at Hit- ler like a messiah. I used to go to soccer games on Sunday where there were 40,000 people there and we had thE Jewish (soccer) Club and I heard: Wait till Hitler comes. You will play under the ground.' This was a professional soccer club and they were very good, and of course, the better they were, the more anti-Semitic the audiences wen. and so I felt . . . my father didn't feel what I felt. I felt it in school. "So we three were in Palestint and my brother was in Vienna when Hitler came to power there on March: 12, 1938. On March 15, after my brother had collected rent from our apartment house, our non-Jewish lawyer called up and said to him: 'Tell me, did you collect rent today?' M3 brother said yes. The lawyer said `Don't you know the new Nuerenberg law is that if a Jew collects rent from ? non-Jew, it's the death penalty. You better get out as soon as you can.' " And Richard Chajes, tall with blond hair and blue eyes, left for Italy that day without any possessions Within a month he joined his family in Palestine and enrolled at Hebre',=1 , , When Julius Chajes raises his baton this Sunday to signal the open- ing of the 45th season of the Center Symphony Orchestra, he will have double cause to celebrate. This year also marks his 50th anniversary as a composer of Jewish music. Sitting in the living room of his West Bloomfield home, the white- haired musician with expressive blue eyes becomes excited as he shares this early experience which took place in Lwow, Poland. "Too bad my name isn't Mozart or Beethoven. Then I could be a com- poser," Chajes remembers saying to an older friend when Chajes was nine. "You don't have to have that name," advised the friend. "Anybody can corn- pose." Your legs are smaller than somebody else's but that has nothing to do with your brains.' " From that time on, Chajes' small stature never bothered him. After playing two concertos with the symphony orchestra of Lwow (also known as Lemberg and today as Lvov), his father took Julius to Vienna to audition for Richard Robert, the famous piano teacher. So impressed was Robert that he insisted on taking the 10-year-old under his tutelage immediately, even though it meant he would have to give up two other stu- dents. Not long after, Julius also began studying composition with Hugo Kauder, with whom he studied for many years. For the first four years Chajes : Continued on Page 14