Remember When • • Artistic ODYSSEY County will most likely hear him with the Birmingham-Bloomfield Symphony Orchestra some time next fall, playing concertos by Grieg and Liszt — both in one program. "He is a very dedicated musician, a very capable one," said Felix Resnick, BBSO conductor. "We just haven't been able to pin down the date because he is so busy doing concerts." The Early Career 7 DIANA LIEBERMAN Staff he past 10 years have been good to West Bloomfield pianist David Syme. He is making an excel- lent living in music, his name has become a household word and he has a wife he adores. But Syme, son of one noted Detroit- area rabbi and brother of another, is looking for even better times in the 21st century as he sets out to recapture the world of classical music. Syme returned a few weeks ago from Prague, where he performed Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto with the Czech National Symphony Orchestra. In October, he toured Great Britain with the same orchestra, play- ing George Gershwin's Concerto in E He performed Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue with the Chicago Sinfonietta throughout Great Britain in November. The tour included two solo recitals. Meanwhile, Syme's fans in Oakland Syme showed his remarkable musical tal- ent by the time he was 3 years old, said his older brother, Rabbi Daniel Syme of Temple Beth El in Bloomfield Township. "David ruined my piano career," Rabbi Syme said with a smile. "I had been taking piano lessons until age 13. Then I played my first recital. It was Beethoven's 'Fur Elise,' and I spent six months working on it." When the family returned from the recital, David went to the piano and played the whole piece by ear — per- fectly. "That was it," said Rabbi Syme. "I never played piano again. He is a genius. If we're lucky, one of us gets to introduce him." The brothers' parents are Rabbi M. Robert Syme, rabbi emeritus of Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, and his wife, Sonia, a gifted amateur pianist. David Syme had no serious piano les- sons until he was 13, when he began studying with the late Mischa Kottler, vir- tuoso pianist with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. A year later, he made his first solo appearance, playing Beethoven's First Piano Concerto with Detroit's Mumford High School Orchestra. By age 18, he was performing Rachmaninov's Second Piano Concerto with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the first of nine solo appearances with the DSO. He earned bachelor's and master's degrees in piano performance from New York's Juilliard School, followed by exten- sive training, competing and performing both in the United States and abroad. Through the years, he received excellent reviews for orchestral appearances and solo recitals in New York, London, Moscow, Vienna, Stuttgart, Mexico City, Washington, D.C., and more. A Turn In The Road It was an artistically satisfying life, but not a lucrative one. "I would tour Europe and it was a wonderful experience," Syme remem- bered. "But then I would get home, and I'd have very little money left and all these bills to pay." While on tour, he would sometimes linger in lounges and restaurants, still in his concert attire. People would ask him to play their favorite songs and he was gratified to find that, after all these years, his ability to play anything by ear had not left him. Now, he estimates he can play 5,000 songs, with more added constantly. Since 1990, via WYUR (1310 AM), millions of radio listeners nationwide have enjoyed Syme's performances of musical standards and pop favorites. Listeners phone in their requests and, usually, he succeeds in reproducing that song, complete with harmony. He does it with an amiable, folksy quality that goes over well with easy- listening audiences. Syme is a popular entertainer at cor- porate parties as well as at simchas in the Jewish community; his appearances at Birmingham's First Night celebration on New Year's Eve pack the hall. In all, he estimates he has made more than 800 guest appearances in the past 10 years. All this has added up to a lucrative business in self-produced compact discs and cassette tapes, starting with "Play It Again Syme" and including "Jewish Music Then and Now." But something was missing. In 1999, Syme celebrated his 50th birthday, and he realized his career was no longer fulfilling. "My life was moving on and I wasn't doing anything to main- stream all the dreams I ever had about a career," said the West Bloomfield resi- dent. "I can make people feel really good by playing their favorite songs, and I think it is certainly a noble calling, but I think I can do much more significant work by playing the immortal composi- tions of the composers I love." Now is the time to take the plunge, Syme said. His wife of two years, Victoria, man- ages the record label and acts as liaison between the pianist and those who want to hire him. Their finances are in good shape and he still has enough people who remember him from his classical days to give him a hand as he revives that part of his career. "Luckily, the tools are still there," said Syme, who practices as much as eight hours a day. "You are only as good as the last time you played." From the pages of the Jewish News this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 1990 A Jewish Braille Institute volunteer completed the first book for the blind to be read in Hungarian, Jacob Allerno's A History of Israel. A Tay-Sachs genetic screening mainly for Torah-observant young adults of marriageable age was sched- uled at Sinai Hospital of Detroit. Archaeologists discovered a 19,000- year-old skeleton on the shore of Lake Kinneret in Tiberias, Israel. 1980 S. J. Cherrin is the new social vice president of Congregation B'nai Moshe's Senior "Moshe Mouse" United Synagogue Youth group. Five-hundred Druze living on the Golan Heights applied for citizenship. 1970 Yael Ped, the great-granddaughter of Capt. Alfred Dreyfus, settled in Israel in a kibbutz north of Tel Aviv. Metro Detroiter Martin K Stein was elected president of the Probus Club. Kfar Darom, the first Jewish set- tlement in the Gaza Strip since the War of Independence in 1948, was dedicated. Israeli Premier David Ben-Gurion enraged American Jews by declaring that diaspora Jews had forsaken their religion. Gottlieb Musikant, former SS medical orderly, got 21 life terms in West Germany for killing 21 wartime prisoners. Surveys of Pembroke and Brown college graduates showed that inter- religious marriages led to reduced fertility. :43Nakk:,- s,\,35M The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra started a two-month American tour at a cost of $500,000. Career Group of the National Council of Jewish Women pledged to send one box of play materials and supplies a month to the Aid- to-Israel program. — Compiled by Sy Manello, editorial assistant 12/29 2000 29