. . "GUTMAN, Adam = ADAMS, George (pseudonym)"@eng . "Adam Gutman was born March 20, 1916 in Radom, Poland. A child prodigy in violin, he was performing in public by age 13 and was the first Jew accepted to the Warsaw conservatory of music. During WWII he was interned in the ghetto and was then deported to the concentration camps of Auschwitz and Mathausen. His wife Ida survived the war, but 2 siblings did not, prompting Gutman to use a combination of their names, Benjamin Rajzele, to sign the paintings he created later in his life.Reunited after the war with his wife, he and Ida immigrated to Canada with their children James and Betty in the late 1940s. Soon after his arrival, Gutman played violin briefly with the Ottawa symphony, then took up the career of a touring violinist, playing in the cities and small communities of Quebec, often in gypsy costume. For his musical career, his agent advised him to use the name George Adams, and it was under this name that he became known as a composer of popular French music which often topped the charts of the Quebec hit parade, paired with the lyrics of artists such as Jean Grimaldi and sung by singers such as Alys Robi, Jacques Darieux, Yvan Daniel, Roland Montreuil, Jimmy Burns and Rod Norman. When the popularity of this music waned, Gutman concentrated on teaching music privately to Montreal students, using a variety of instruments. He was also a collector of instruments, a painter and a poet. He set the poetry of many Yiddish poets to music and hoped to publish these compositions. Adam Gutman died in August 2003."@eng . "GUTMAN, Adam = ADAMS, George (pseudonym)"@eng . .