Jacob Goldstein
1897-1961
Cantor Jacob Goldstein was born into a Chassidic family in Warsaw, Poland, in 1879. As a youngster he was nurtured on the melodies of the first Moditzer Rebbe, Rabbi Israel Toub, and his father realised early on that his son was destined for a career in Synagogue music.
He received his musical training at the Warsaw Conservatory.
In 1917, at the age of 20, Cantor Goldstein became Second Cantor of Warsaw's Nozik Street Synagogue, where Mordechai Hershman was First Cantor.
He served as the Head Cantor of the Taharat Hakodesh Choral Synagogue, one of the most important of Vilna's Synagogues, and in 1925 he succeeded one of his teachers, the cantor and composer, Abraham Moses Bernstein.
Subsequently, Chazan Goldstein succeeded the famed Cantor Zaidl Rovner in Rovno, Latvia.
In 1933 Cantor Goldstein moved to London, where he served as Cantor of the renowned New Synagogue, Egerton Road, Stamford Hill. During his time there he was much in demand for concerts and performances.
During the wartime 'Blitz' a local newspaper reported that '.....he was singing for the greatest congregation of his life, 12,000 men and women, Jew and Gentile, huddled together every night in the Manor House [underground] Tube Station, while the Luftwaffe roared overhead.'
After World War II, Cantor Goldstein toured Palestine and then became the Cantor of Congregation Sons of Israel in Brooklyn, where he served until he died in 1961.