Inge Ginsberg, Holocaust survivor with a heavy metal coda, dies at 99
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Inge Ginsberg, Holocaust survivor with a heavy metal coda, dies at 99
Inge Ginsberg performs with her band, Inge and the Tritones. Ginsberg, who fled the Holocaust, helped American spies in Switzerland during World War II, wrote songs in Hollywood and, in a final assertion of her presence on earth, made a foray into heavy metal music as a nonagenarian, died on July 20, 2021, in a care home in Zurich, Switzerland. She was 99. Leah Galant via The New York Times.

by Annabelle Williams



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Inge Ginsberg, who fled the Holocaust, helped U.S. spies in Switzerland during World War II, wrote songs in Hollywood and, in a final assertion of her presence on Earth, made a foray into heavy metal music as a nonagenarian, died July 20 in a care home in Zurich. She was 99.

The cause was heart failure, said Pedro da Silva, a friend and bandmate.

In a picaresque life, Ginsberg lived in New York City, Switzerland, Israel and Ecuador. She wrote songs and poetry, worked as a journalist and refused to fade into the background as she aged, launching herself, improbably, into her heavy metal career.

She was the frontwoman for the band Inge and the Tritone Kings, which competed on television in “Switzerland’s Got Talent,” entered the Eurovision Song Contest and made music videos. Whatever the venue, Ginsberg would typically appear in long gowns and pearls and flash the two-fingered hand signal for “rock on” as she sang about the Holocaust, climate change, mental health and other issues.

In the 2017 music video for the band’s song “I’m Still Here,” Ginsberg stands in front of a screen showing filmed images of refugees. She sings — in a manner reminiscent of spoken-word poetry — about her grandmother and four young cousins, all of whom were killed in German camps. At the end, she slices the screen and walks through it, singing as she joins the other band members amid a roar of electric guitars, drums and a pounded piano.

“All my life, I fought for freedom and peace,” she sings. In the last chorus, Ginsberg, who was in her 90s at the time, screams, “I’m still here!”

The band grew out of a friendship between Ginsberg and Lucia Caruso; they had met in the audience of a concert in 2003 at the Manhattan School of Music in New York. Caruso, a student there, was watching the performance of a doctoral composition by her boyfriend, da Silva. The couple married, went on to performing and teaching careers in classical music and stayed close to Ginsberg.

One day in 2014, Ginsberg read out loud to da Silva the words of a children’s song she was writing. “She wrote these lyrics about worms eating your flesh after you die,” da Silva said. That had the ring of heavy metal to him, and he suggested building a band around her.

The band began rehearsing and filming music videos later that year, the productions paid for by Ginsberg. She wrote the lyrics to their songs and performed them, with da Silva, Caruso and others accompanying her on various instruments, including the guitar, piano, drums, organ and oud.

A short documentary video in 2018 for The New York Times Opinion section by filmmaker Leah Galant recounted Ginsberg’s story. It shows scenes of her performing on “Switzerland’s Got Talent” and auditioning to appear on the NBC show “America’s Got Talent.” Speaking on camera, she said she wanted to prove through her performing that elderly people could still contribute to society.

“In American and even European culture, the old people are excluded from life,” Ginsberg said in the documentary. “You have to have the chance to be heard.”

Galant said in an interview, “We felt energized by her as much she felt energized by us.”




Ingeborg Neufeld was born in Vienna on Jan. 27, 1922, to Fritz and Hildegard (Zwicker) Neufeld. Her father ran a freight company, and her mother was a homemaker.

Ginsberg described herself as a “Jewish princess” in her youth; she and her brother, Hans, had been afforded every luxury. But that changed with the rise of the Nazi Party.

Ginsberg would tell Caruso and da Silva stories of the persecution of Jews in pre-World War II Vienna. In one instance, she said, she hid all night behind a grandfather clock in a building in town to evade Nazi paramilitary forces targeting Jews. Her mother assumed the worst, but Inge returned the next morning to a tearful reunion.

After the war had begun, her father was arrested and sent to the Dachau concentration camp but was freed, Ginsberg said, after he bribed Nazi officials. Her mother, meanwhile, using money from the sale of her jewelry, fled to Switzerland in 1942 with Inge, Hans and Inge’s boyfriend, Otto Kollman, who would become Inge’s husband.

The family lived in refugee camps in Switzerland, and Ginsberg managed a villa in Lugano, which was used as a safe house for Italian resistance members; there, she said, she and Kollman would pass messages from the resistance to the American OSS, the precursor of the CIA.

After the war, she and Kollman made their way to Hollywood, where they worked as a songwriting duo. The couple divorced in 1956.

Ginsberg said in The Times documentary that she eventually found Hollywood “all fake” and returned to Europe the year of her divorce. She worked as a journalist in Zurich, wrote a German-language memoir of her time at the villa and published several books of poetry. She had invested successfully in the stock market, which kept her wealthy throughout her life and allowed her to pursue writing.

In 1960, she married Hans Kruger, who ran a luxury hotel in Tel Aviv, Israel, where the couple lived. They divorced in 1972. That same year, she married Kurt Ginsberg, and they mainly lived in Quito, Ecuador.

Ginsberg is survived by her daughter with Kollman, Marion Niemi, and a granddaughter.

After her third husband’s death, Ginsberg split her time among homes in New York, Tel Aviv and Zurich. By the spring of 2020, she was living in the Zurich care facility when she contracted the coronavirus. Pandemic restrictions often kept residents from seeing one another or from entertaining visitors, and the isolation took its toll.

“We have no doubt whatsoever that she died because of boredom, loneliness and depression,” da Silva said.

He and Caruso kept in touch with her over the phone, and the three began writing another song for the band called “Never Again,” also drawing on Ginsberg’s experience during the Holocaust.

“Each one of my songs has a message,” Ginsberg said in the documentary. “Don’t destroy what you can’t replace.” She added a second message: “You can’t avoid death, so laugh about it.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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