from the studio to my home with all my makeup on, and still wearing the costumes in which I had played a sailor or a schoolboy." Although he hated practicing — "God forbid I practiced" — Rosenow emerged into a top- notch musician. He formed his own band in 1937 with piano, saxophone, violin, drums and trumpet and found work playing dance music in cocktail lounges. With Hitler's rise to power, Rosenow and his musicians, all of whom were Jewish, were lim- ited to performing for Jewish groups. Rosenow realized he had to leave Berlin. "But every door was closed to me," he says. "I tried to go to South America, to England. But they didn't want musicians. They wanted the arbeiter, the working people, like mechanics." Only Shanghai was ready to accept Rosenow. So he boarded a ship — "the captain got very mad if you called it a boat" — and headed for his new home. "Not a penny in my pocket," Rosenow made money playing on board. After a brief stop in Italy, the ship landed in Shanghai on April 27, 1939. Some 5,000 Jews already had settled in the city. Rosenow took a one-room apartment with a toilet downstairs. "And if you wanted to take a bath, you had to go a mile away, to the refugee camps. It wasn't always rosy, but I managed to survive.because of my music." He found work playing piano at cocktail lounges, bars and at clubs owned by Soviet Jews who had settled in Shanghai after the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. He usually earned enough for two meals a day and considered himself fortunate. Thousands around him were dying, he says. Rosenow spent nine years in Shanghai, where he "learned a little Chinese and met my wife," also a German Jew. The two, along with Rosenow's parents, who followed their son to Shanghai, left in 1948 for the United States. His first job in Detroit was as a factory worker, where he earned $30-$45 a week. But he couldn't forget his music and in 1953, Rosenow left the factory and created his own band. Four of those original musicians still play with him. He called himself "Eric aus Berlin," Eric from Berlin, and called his band the Continen- tals "because it sounded European." Rosenow was quick to find work at b'nai mitzvah and weddings. He wanted to look good for the shows, so he picked out snazzy blue, black and white uniforms for the band. Rosenow says he will never forget one wed- ding at an Oak Park congregation. "Two peo- ple fainted at this. It wasn't the couple; it wasn't the parents. It was the sister and the brother of the bride. I won't mention the name." He also took jobs at some of Detroit's top ho- tels and ball rooms, like the Vanity on Jeffer- son Avenue, which had a long and elegant staircase. "Boy, do I remember schlepping our instruments up those stairs," he says. He performed in Cleveland, Chicago and Toronto and worked at a 25-room hotel in the Catskills where "the room I played in was only as big as a table." And in his spare time, Rosenow gave piano lessons. He had 58 students and traveled to their homes to teach. "I remember I had one student who had a short finger. I didn't ever think he'd make it, but now he's a professional musician." It was a lot of work, Rosenow agrees. "But in America you had to be ambitious or you would never make it." Active in the B'nai B'rith Einstein Lodge, the Israel Cancer Society, Magen David Adorn and others, Rosenow has cut down on his con- cert schedule, though he still appears throughout the area with a full band. He stopped giving piano lessons eight years ago. "By then, my patience was running out." Sam Barnett with his orchestra in the 1960s (top) and at a wedding in 1989.