Jaffa refreshed his violin playing after the war by studying with Sascha Lasserson, and soon joined the
Mantovani Orchestra - he was the leader and soloist on its bestseller "
Charmaine" (1951). He would sometimes play with the Albert Sandler Trio when Sandler himself was ill, and after Sandler's death in 1948 took his place alongside the other members, cellist Reginald Kilbey and pianist Jack Byfield, to form the Max Jaffa Trio. A Yorkshire Television documentary in 1986 filmed his final season as Scarborough, aged 74. Jaffa recorded the violin and orchestra version of "
Dark Eyes", written by
Adalgiso Ferraris. His collaboration with Ferraris included other songs, such as "Souvenir d'Ukraine" and "Gipsy Idylle". Grayston performed with Jaffa at his diamond jubilee gala concert in 1987 at the
Queen Elizabeth Hall. As late as 1989 he formed a new Max Jaffa Trio for BBC broadcasts, with Alan Dalziel (cello) and
Gordon Langford (piano). His autobiography,
A Life on the Fiddle, was published by
Hodder and Stoughton shortly before his death in 1991 at his London home. Jaffa is cited as a member of the eclectic (and fictional) "orchestra" in The
Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band's recording,
The Intro and the Outro. ==Selected recordings==