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Klezmer

Klezmer (Yiddish: קלעזמער or כּלי־זמר) is an instrumental musical tradition of the Ashkenazi Jews of Central and Eastern Europe. The essential elements of the tradition include dance tunes, ritual melodies, and virtuosic improvisations played for listening; these would have been played at weddings and other social functions.[1][2] The musical genre incorporated elements of many other musical genres including Ottoman (especially Greek and Romanian) music, Baroque music, German and Slavic folk dances, and religious Jewish music.[3][4] As the music arrived in the United States, it lost some of its traditional ritual elements and adopted elements of American big band and popular music.[5][6] Among the European-born klezmers who popularized the genre in the United States in the 1910s and 1920s were Dave Tarras and Naftule Brandwein; they were followed by American-born musicians such as Max Epstein, Sid Beckerman and Ray Musiker.[7]

Klezmer
Native name
קלעזמער
Other namesJewish instrumental folk music, Freylekh music
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsAshkenazic Jewish ceremonies, especially weddings, in Eastern Europe
Typical instrumentsStandard orchestra instruments, accordion, cimbalom

After the destruction of Jewish life in Eastern Europe during the Holocaust, and a general fall in the popularity of klezmer music in the United States, the music began to be popularized again in the late 1970s in the so-called Klezmer Revival.[8] During the 1980s and onwards, musicians experimented with traditional and experimental forms of the genre, releasing fusion albums combining the genre with jazz, punk, and other styles.[9]

Etymology

The term klezmer, as used in the Yiddish language, has a Hebrew etymology: klei, meaning "tools, utensils or instruments of" and zemer, "melody"; leading to k'lei zemer כְּלֵי זֶמֶר‎, meaning "musical instruments".[10] This expression would have been familiar to literate Jews across the diaspora, not only Ashkenazi Jews in Eastern Europe.[11] Over time the usage of "klezmer" in a Yiddish context evolved to describe musicians instead of their instruments, first in Bohemia in the second half of the sixteenth century and then in Poland, possibly as a response to the new status of the musicians who were at that time forming professional guilds.[11] Previously the musician may have been referred to as a lets (לץ) or other terms.[12][13] After the term klezmer became the preferred term for these professional musicians in Yiddish-speaking Eastern Europe, other types of musicians were more commonly known as muziker or muzikant.

It was not until the late 20th century that the word "Klezmer" became a commonly known English language term.[14] During that time, through metonymy it came to refer not only to the musician but to the musical genre they played, a meaning which it had not had in Yiddish.[15][16] Early 20th century recording industry materials and other writings had referred to it as Hebrew, Jewish, or Yiddish dance music, or sometimes using the Yiddish term Freilech music ("Cheerful music").

Twentieth century Russian scholars sometimes used the term Klezmer; Ivan Lipaev did not use it, but Moisei Beregovsky did when publishing in Yiddish or Ukrainian.[11]

The first[citation needed] postwar recordings to use the term "klezmer" to refer to the music were The Klezmorim's East Side Wedding and Streets of Gold in 1977/78, followed by Andy Statman and Zev Feldman's Jewish Klezmer Music in 1979.[citation needed]

Musical elements

Style

The traditional style of playing Klezmer music, including tone, typical cadences, and ornamentation sets it apart from other genres.[17] Although Klezmer music emerged out of a larger Eastern European Jewish musical culture that included Jewish cantorial music, Hasidic Nigns, and later Yiddish theatre music, it also borrowed from the surrounding folk musics of Central and Eastern Europe and from cosmopolitan European musical forms.[3] Therefore it evolved into an overall style which has recognizable elements from all of those other genres.

Few klezmer musicians before the late nineteenth century had formal musical training, but they inherited a rich tradition with its own advanced musical techniques, each musician had their understanding of how the style should be "correctly" performed.[18][17] The usage of these ornaments was not random; the matters of "taste", self-expression, variation and restraint were and remain important elements of how to interpret the music.[17]

Klezmer musicians apply the overall style to available specific techniques on each melodic instrument. They incorporate and elaborate the vocal melodies of Jewish religious practice, including khazones, davenen, and paraliturgical song, extending the range of human voice into the musical expression possible on instruments.[19] Among those stylistic elements that are considered typically "Jewish" in Klezmer music are those which are shared with cantorial or Hasidic vocal ornaments, including dreydlekh ("tear in the voice") and imitations of sighing or laughing ("laughter through tears").[20] Various Yiddish terms were used for these vocal-like ornaments such as קרעכץ (Krekhts, "groan" or "moan"), קנײטש (kneytsh, "wrinkle" or "fold"), and קװעטש (kvetsh, "pressure" or "stress").[10] Other ornaments such as trills, grace notes, appoggiaturas, pedal notes, mordents, slides and typical Klezmer cadences are also important to the style.[17] In particular, the cadences which draw on religious Jewish music identify a piece more strongly as a Klezmer tune, even if its broader structure was borrowed from a non-Jewish source.[21] Unlike in Classical music, vibrato is used more sparingly, and is treated as another type of ornament.[20][17]

The accompaniment style of the accompanist or orchestra could be fairly impromptu, called צוהאַלטן (tsuhaltn, holding onto).[22]

Historical repertoire

The repertoire of Klezmer musicians was very diverse and tied to specific social functions and dances, especially of the traditional wedding.[1] These melodies might have a non-Jewish origin, or have been composed by a Klezmer, but only rarely are they attributed to a specific composer.[23] Generally Klezmer music can be divided into two broad categories: music for specific dances, and music for listening (at the table, in processions, ceremonial, etc.)[23]

Dances

  • Freylekhs. The simplest and most widespread type of Klezmer dance tune are those played in 2
    4
    and intended for group circle dances. Depending on the location this basic dance may also have been called a Redl (circle), Hopke, Karahod (round dance, literally the Belarusian translation of the Russian khorovod), Dreydl, Rikudl, etc.[1][24][22][10]
  • Bulgar
  • Sher is a Contra dance in 2
    4
    . Beregovsky, writing in the 1930s, noted that despite the dance being very commonly played across a wide area, and that he suspected it had its roots in an older German dance.[1] This dance continued to be known in the United States even after other complex European Klezmer dances had been forgotten.[25]
  • Khosidl, or khusidl, named after the Hasidic Jews who danced it, is a more dignified embellished dance in 2
    4
    or 4
    4
    . The dance steps can be performed in a circle or in a line.
  • Hora or zhok is a Romanian-style dance in a hobbling 3
    8
    time with beats on 1 and 3, and is even more embellished. The Israeli hora derives its roots from the Romanian hora. The Yiddish name zhok comes from the Romanian Joc, literally "dance".
  • Broygez-tants[23]
  • Kolomeike is a fast and catchy dance in 2
    4
    time, which originated in Ukraine, and is prominent in the folk music of that country.
  • Skotshne is generally thought to be a more elaborate Freylekhs which could be played either for dancing or listening.[1]
  • Nigun, a very broad term which can refer to melodies for listening, singing or dancing.[10] Usually a mid-paced song in 2
    4
    .
  • Waltzes were very popular, whether classical, Russian, or Polish. A padespan was a sort of Russian/Spanish waltz known to klezmers.
  • Mazurka and polka, Polish and Czech dances, respectively, were often played for both Jews and Gentiles.
  • Sirba – a Romanian dance in 2
    2
    or 2
    4
    (Romanian sârbă). It features hopping steps and short bursts of running, accompanied by triplets in the melody.

Non-dance repertoire

  • The Doyne is a freeform instrumental form borrowed from the Romanian shepherd's Doina. Although there are many regional types of Doina in Romania and Moldova, the Jewish form is typically simpler, with a minor key theme which is then repeated in a major key, followed by a Freylekhs.[23] A Volekhl is a related genre.[10]
  • Tish-nign (table tune)[10]
  • Moralish, a type of Nigun, called Devekut in Hebrew, which inspires spiritual arousal or a pious mood.[10][22]
  • A Vals (Waltz), pieces in 3
    4
    especially in the Hasidic context, may be slower than non-Jewish waltzes and intended for listening while the wedding parties are seated at their tables.[10]
  • Forms centering on bridal rituals, including Kale-bazetsn (seating of the bride)
  • A Marsh (March) can be non-Jewish march melodies adapted into joyful singing or playing contexts.[10]
  • Processional melodies, including Gas-nigunim (street tunes), Tsum tish (to the table). According to Beregovski the Gas-nign was always in 3
    4
    time.[23]
  • The Taksim, whose name is borrowed from the Ottoman/Arab Taqsim is a freeform fantasy on a particular motif, ornemented with trills, roulades and so on; it usually ends with a Freylekhs.[23] By the twentieth century it has mostly become obsolete and was replaced by the Doina.[26]
  • Fantazi or fantasy is a freeform song, traditionally played at Jewish weddings to the guests as they dined. It resembles the fantasia of "light" classical music.
  • A Terkisher is a type of virtuosic solo piece in 4
    4
    performed by leading klezmorim such as Dave Tarras and Naftule Brandwein. There is no dance for this type of melody, rather it references an Ottoman or "oriental" style, and melodies may incorporate references to Greek Hasapiko into a Ashkenazic musical aesthetic.
  • Parting melodies played at the beginning or end of a wedding day, such as the Zay gezunt (be healthy), Gas-nign, Dobriden (good day), Dobranotsh or A gute nakht (good night) etc.[23][27] These types of pieces were sometimes in 3
    4
    which may have given an air of dignity and seriousness.[28]

Orchestration

Klezmer music is an instrumental tradition, without much of a history of songs or singing. In Eastern Europe, Klezmers did traditionally accompany the vocal stylings of the Badchen (wedding entertainer), although their performances were typically improvised couplets and the calling of ceremonies rather than songs.[29][30] (The importance of the Badchen gradually decreased by the twentieth century, although they still continued in some traditions.[31])

As for the klezmer orchestra, its size and composition varied by time and place. The Klezmer bands of the eighteenth and early nineteenth century were small, with roughly three to five musicians playing Woodwind or String instruments.[18] Another common configuration in that era was similar to Hungarian bands today, typically a lead violinist, second violin, cello, and Cimbalom.[32][33] In the mid-nineteenth century, the Clarinet started to appear in those small Klezmer ensembles as well.[34] By the last decades of the century, in Ukraine, the orchestras had grown larger, averaging seven to twelve members, and incorporating Brass instruments and up to twenty for a prestigious occasion.[35][36] (However, for poor weddings a large Klezmer ensemble might only send three or four of its junior members.[35]) In these larger orchestras, on top of the core instrumentation of strings and woodwinds, cornets, C clarinets, trombones, a contrabass, a large Turkish drum, and several extra violins.[23] The inclusion of Jews in tsarist army bands during the 19th century may also have led to the introduction of typical military band instruments into klezmer. With such large orchestras, the music was arranged so that the bandleader soloist could still be heard at key moments.[37] In Galicia, and Belarus, the smaller string ensemble with cimbalom remained the norm into the twentieth century.[38][23] American Klezmer as it developed in dancehalls and wedding banquets of the early twentieth century had a more complete orchestration not unlike those used in popular orchestras of the time. They use a clarinet, saxophone, or trumpet for the melody, and make great use of the trombone for slides and other flourishes.

 
Jewish musicians of Rohatyn (west Ukraine)

The melody in Klezmer music is generally assigned to the lead violin, although occasionally the flute and eventually clarinet.[23] The other instrumentalists provide harmony, rhythm, and some counterpoint (the latter usually coming from the second violin or viola). The clarinet now often played the melody. Brass instruments—such as the French valved cornet and keyed German trumpet—eventually inherited a counter-voice role.[39] Modern klezmer instrumentation is more commonly influenced by the instruments of the 19th century military bands than the earlier orchestras.

Percussion in early 20th-century klezmer recordings was generally minimal—no more than a wood block or snare drum. In Eastern Europe, percussion was often provided by a drummer who played a frame drum, or poyk, sometimes called baraban. A poyk is similar to a bass drum and often has a cymbal or piece of metal mounted on top, which is struck by a beater or a small cymbal strapped to the hand.

Melodic modes

Western, Cantorial, and Ottoman music terminology

Klezmer music is a genre that developed partly in the Western musical tradition but also in the Ottoman Empire, and is primarily an oral tradition which does not have a well-established literature to explain its modes and modal progression.[40][41] But, as with other types of Ashkenazic Jewish music, it has a complex system of modes which were used in its compositions.[10][42] Many of its melodies do not fit well in the major and minor terminology used in Western music, nor is the music systematically microtonal in the way that Middle Eastern music is.[40] Nusach terminology, as developed for Cantorial music in the nineteenth century, is often used instead, and indeed many Klezmer compositions draw heavily on religious music.[27] But it also incorporates elements of Baroque and Eastern European folk musics, making description based only on religious terminology incomplete.[21][22][43] Still, since the Klezmer revival of the 1970s, the terms for Jewish prayer modes are the most common to describe the those used in klezmer.[44] The terms used in Yiddish for these modes include Nusach (נוסח); shteyger (שטײגער), "manner, mode of life" which describes the typical melodic character, important notes and scale; and gust (גוסט), a word meaning "taste" which was commonly used by Moisei Beregovsky.[22][23][41]

Beregovsky, who was writing in the Stalinist era and was constrained by having to downplay Klezmer's religious aspects, did not use the terminology of Synagogue modes, except in some early work in 1929. Instead, he relied on German-inspired musical terminology of major, minor, and "other" modes, which he described in technical terms.[23][45] In his 1940s works he noted that the majority of the klezmer repertoire seemed to be in a minor key, whether Natural minor or others, that around a quarter of the material was in Freygish, and that around a fifth of the repertoire was in a Major key.[23]

Another set of terminology sometimes used to describe klezmer music is that of the Makams used in Ottoman and other Middle Eastern music.[44][46] This approach dates back to Idelsohn in the early twentieth century, who was very familiar with Middle Eastern music, and has been developed in the past decade by Joshua Horowitz.[47][43][44][40]

Finally, some Klezmer music, and especially those composed in the United States from the mid-twentieth century onwards, may not be composed with these traditional modes, but rather built around chords.[21]

Description

Because there is no agreed-upon, complete system for describing modes in Klezmer music, this list is imperfect and may conflate concepts which some scholars view as separate.[42][47] Another problem in listing these terms as simple eight-note (octatonic) scales is that it makes it harder to see how Klezmer melodic structures can work as five-note pentachords, how parts of different modes typically interact, and what the cultural significance of a given mode might be in a traditional Klezmer context.[40][41]

 
Freygish mode in C
  • Freygish, Ahavo Rabboh, or Phrygian dominant scale resembles the Phrygian mode, having a flat second but also a permanent raised third.[48] It is among the most common modes in Klezmer and is closely identified with Jewish identity; Beregovsky estimated that roughly a quarter of the Klezmer music he had collected was in Freygish.[23][40] Among the most well-known pieces composed in this mode are Hava Nagila and Ma yofus. It is comparable to the Maqam Hijaz found in Arabic music.[40]
 
Mi Sheberakh mode in C
 
Adonoy Molokh mode in C
 
Mogen Ovos mode in C
  • Mogen Ovos is a synagogue mode which resembles the Western Natural minor.[22] In klezmer music, it is often found in greeting and parting pieces, as well as dance tunes.[40] It has some similarities to the Bayati maqam used in Arabic and Turkish music.
  • Yishtabakh resembles Mogen Ovos and Freygish. It is a variant of the Mogen Ovos scale that frequently flattens the second and fifth degrees.[49]

History

Europe

Development of the genre

The Bible has several descriptions of orchestras and Levites making music, but after the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, many Rabbis discouraged musical instruments.[50] Therefore, while there may have been Jewish musicians in different times and places since then, the "Klezmer" arose much more recently.[51] The earliest written record of the use of the word was identified by Isaac Rivkind [he] as being in a Jewish council meeting from Krakow in 1595.[52][53] They may have existed even earlier in Prague, as references to them have been found as early as 1511 and 1533.[54] It was in the 1600s that the situation of Jewish musicians in Poland improved, as they gained the right to form Guilds (Khevre), and therefore to set their own fees, hire Christians, and so on.[55] Therefore over time this new form of professional musician developed new forms of music and elaborated this tradition across a wide area of Eastern European Jewish life. The rise of Hasidic Judaism in the sixteenth century and onwards also contributed to the development of klezmer, due to their emphasis on dancing and wordless melodies as a component of Jewish practice.[16]

 
Medieval Jewish wedding procession (date unknown)

The Eastern European klezmer profession (1700–1930s)

 
Portrait of Pedotser (A. M. Kholodenko), nineteenth century klezmer virtuoso

The nineteenth century also saw the rise of a number of klezmer violin virtuosos who combined the techniques of classical violinists such as Ivan Khandoshkin and of Bessarabian folk violinists, and who composed dance and display pieces that became widespread even after the composers were gone.[56] Among these figures were Aron-Moyshe Kholodenko "Pedotser", Yosef Drucker "Stempenyu", Alter Goyzman "Alter Chudnover" and Josef Gusikov.[57][58][59][60]

Unlike in the United States, where there was a robust Klezmer recording industry, there was relatively less recorded in Europe in the early twentieth century. The majority of European recordings of Jewish music consisted of Cantorial and Yiddish Theatre music, with only a few dozen known to exist of Klezmer music.[61] These include violin pieces by artists such as Oscar Zehngut, H. Steiner, Leon Ahl, and Josef Solinski; flute pieces by S. Kosch, and ensemble recordings by Belf's Romanian Orchestra, the Russian-Jewish Orchestra, Jewish Wedding Orchestra, and Titunshnayder's Orchestra.[61][62]

Klezmer in the late Russian empire and Soviet era

The loosening of restrictions on Jews in the Russian Empire, and their newfound access to academic and conservatory training, created a class of scholars who began to reexamine and evaluate klezmer using modern techniques.[23] Abraham Zevi Idelsohn was one such figure, who sought to find an ancient Middle Eastern origin for Jewish music in the diaspora.[63] There was also new interest in collecting and studying Jewish music and folklore, including Yiddish songs, folk tales, and instrumental music. An early expedition was by Joel Engel, who collected folk melodies in his birthplace of Berdyansk in 1900. The first figure to collect large amounts of klezmer music was Susman Kiselgof, who made several expeditions to the Pale of Settlement from 1907 to 1915.[64] He was soon followed by other scholars such as Moisei Beregovsky and Sofia Magid, Soviet scholars of Yiddish and klezmer music.[65][23] Most of the materials collected in those expeditions are now held by the Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine.[66]

 
Klezmer musicians at a wedding, Ukraine, ca. 1925

Beregovsky, writing in the late 1930s, lamented how little scholars knew about the range of playing technique and social context of Klezmers from past eras, except for the late nineteenth century which could be investigated through elderly musicians who still remembered it.[1]

Jewish music in the Soviet Union, and the continued use of Klezmer music, went through several phases of official support or censorship. The officially-supported Soviet Jewish musical culture of 1920s involved works based on or satirizing traditional melodies and themes, whereas those of the 1930s were often "Russian" cultural works translated into a Yiddish context.[67] After 1948, Soviet Jewish culture entered a phase of repression, meaning that Jewish music concerts, whether tied to Hebrew, Yiddish, or instrumental Klezmer were no longer allowed to be performed. [68] Moisei Beregovsky's academic work was shut down in 1949 and he was arrested and deported to Siberia in 1951.[69][70] The repression was eased in the mid-1950s as some Jewish and Yiddish performances were allowed to return to the stage once again.[71] However, the main venue for Klezmer has always been traditional community events, weddings, and not the concert stage or academic institute; those traditional venues were repressed along with Jewish culture in general, according to anti-religious Soviet policy.[72]

United States

Early American klezmer (1880s–1910s)

The first klezmers to arrive in the United States followed the first large waves of Eastern European Jewish immigration which began after 1880, establishing themselves mainly in large cities like New York, Philadelphia and Boston.[16] Klezmers—often younger members of klezmer families, or less established musicians—started to arrive from the Russian Empire, the Kingdom of Romania and Austria-Hungary.[73] Some of them found work in restaurants, dance halls, union rallies, wine cellars, and other modern venues in places like New York's Lower East Side.[74][75] But the major source of income for klezmer musicians seems to have remained weddings and Simchas, as in Europe.[76] Those early generations of klezmers are much more poorly documented than those working in the 1910s and 1920s; many never recorded or published music, although some are remembered through family or community history, such as the Lemish klezmer family of Iași, Romania who arrived in Philadelphia in the 1880s and established a klezmer dynasty there.[77][76]

Big band klezmer orchestras (1910s–1920s)

 
Max Leibowitz orchestra from 1921

The vitality of the Jewish music industry in major American cities attracted ever more klezmers from Europe in the 1910s. This coincided with the development of the recording industry, which recorded a number of these klezmer orchestras. By the time of the First World War, the industry turned its attention to ethnic dance music and a number of bandleaders were hired by record companies such as Edison Records, Emerson Records, Okeh Records, and the Victor Recording Company to record 78 rpm discs.[78] The first of these was Abe Elenkrig, a barber and cornet player from a klezmer family in Ukraine whose 1913 recording Fon der Choope (From the Wedding) has been recognized by the Library of Congress.[79][80][81]

Among the European-born klezmers recording during that decade were some from the Ukrainian territory of the Russian Empire (Abe Elenkrig, Dave Tarras, Shloimke Beckerman, Joseph Frankel, and Israel J. Hochman), some from Austro-Hungarian Galicia (Naftule Brandwein, Harry Kandel and Berish Katz), and some from Romania (Abe Schwartz, Max Leibowitz, Max Yankowitz, Joseph Moskowitz).[82][83][84][85]

The mid 1920s also saw a number of popular novelty "Klezmer" groups which performed on the radio or Vaudeville stages. These included Joseph Cherniavsky's Yiddish-American Jazz Band, whose members would dress as parodies of Cossacks or Hasidim.[86] Another such group was the Boibriker Kapelle, which performed on the radio and in concerts trying to recreate a nostalgic, old-fashioned Galician Klezmer sound.[87] With the passing of the Immigration Act of 1924 which greatly restricted Jewish immigration from Europe, and then the onset of the Great Depression by 1930, the market for Yiddish and klezmer recordings in the United States saw a steep decline, which essentially ended the recording career of many of the popular bandleaders of the 1910s and 1920s, and made the Large klezmer orchestra less viable.[88]

Celebrity clarinetists

Along with the rise of klezmer "big bands" in the 1910s and 1920s, a handful of Jewish clarinet players who had led those bands became celebrities in their own right, with a legacy that lasted into subsequent decades. The most popular among these were Naftule Brandwein, Dave Tarras, and Shloimke Beckerman.[89][90][91]

Klezmer revival

In the mid-to-late 1970s there was a klezmer revival in the United States and Europe, led by Giora Feidman, The Klezmorim, Zev Feldman, Andy Statman, and the Klezmer Conservatory Band. They drew their repertoire from recordings and surviving musicians of U.S. klezmer.[92] In particular, clarinetists such as Dave Tarras and Max Epstein became mentors to this new generation of klezmer musicians.[93] In 1985, Henry Sapoznik and Adrienne Cooper founded KlezKamp to teach klezmer and other Yiddish music.[94]

 
Elane Hoffman Watts, klezmer drummer, in 2007

The 1980s saw a second wave of revival, as interest grew in more traditionally inspired performances with string instruments, largely with non-Jews of the United States and Germany. Musicians began to track down older European klezmer, by listening to recordings, finding transcriptions, and making field recordings of the few klezmorim left in Eastern Europe. Key performers in this style are Joel Rubin, Budowitz, Khevrisa, Di Naye Kapelye, Yale Strom, The Chicago Klezmer Ensemble, The Maxwell Street Klezmer Band, the violinists Alicia Svigals, Steven Greenman,[95] Cookie Segelstein and Elie Rosenblatt, flutist Adrianne Greenbaum, and tsimbl player Pete Rushefsky. Bands like Brave Old World, Hot Pstromi and The Klezmatics also emerged during this period.

In the 1990s, musicians from the San Francisco Bay Area helped further interest in klezmer music by taking it into new territory. Groups such as the New Klezmer Trio inspired a new wave of bands merging klezmer with other forms of music, such as John Zorn's Masada and Bar Kokhba, Naftule's Dream, Don Byron's Mickey Katz project and violinist Daniel Hoffman's klezmer/jazz/Middle-Eastern fusion band Davka.[92] The New Orleans Klezmer All-Stars[96] also formed in 1991 with a mixture of New Orleans funk, jazz, and klezmer styles.

Starting in 2008, "The Other Europeans" project, funded by several EU cultural institutions,[97] spent a year doing intensive field research in Moldavia under the leadership of Alan Bern and scholar Zev Feldman. They wanted to explore klezmer and lautari roots, and fuse the music of the two "other European" groups. The resulting band now performs internationally.

A separate klezmer tradition had developed in Israel in the 20th century. Clarinetists Moshe Berlin and Avrum Leib Burstein are known exponents of the klezmer style in Israel. To preserve and promote klezmer music in Israel, Burstein founded the Jerusalem Klezmer Association, which has become a center for learning and performance of Klezmer music in the country.[98]

Popular culture

In music

While traditional performances may have been on the decline, many Jewish composers who had mainstream success, such as Leonard Bernstein and Aaron Copland, continued to be influenced by the klezmeric idioms heard during their youth (as Gustav Mahler had been). George Gershwin was familiar with klezmer music, and the opening clarinet glissando of Rhapsody in Blue suggests this influence, although the composer did not compose klezmer directly.[99] Some clarinet stylings of swing jazz bandleaders Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw can be interpreted as having been derived from klezmer, as can the "freilach swing" playing of other Jewish artists of the period such as trumpeter Ziggy Elman.

At the same time, non-Jewish composers were also turning to klezmer for a prolific source of fascinating thematic material. Dmitri Shostakovich in particular admired klezmer music for embracing both the ecstasy and the despair of human life, and quoted several melodies in his chamber masterpieces, the Piano Quintet in G minor, op. 57 (1940), the Piano Trio No. 2 in E minor, op. 67 (1944), and the String Quartet No. 8 in C minor, op. 110 (1960).

The compositions of Israeli-born composer Ofer Ben-Amots incorporate aspects of klezmer music, most notably his 2006 composition Klezmer Concerto. The piece is for klezmer clarinet (written for Jewish clarinetist David Krakauer),[100] string orchestra, harp and percussion.[101]

In visual art

 
Issachar Ber Ryback - Wedding Ceremony

The figure of the klezmer, as a romantic symbol of nineteenth century Jewish life, appeared in the art of a number of twentieth century Jewish artists such as Anatoli Lvovich Kaplan, Issachar Ber Ryback, Marc Chagall, and Chaim Goldberg. Kaplan, making his art in the Soviet Union, was quite taken by the romantic images of the Klezmer in literature, and in particular in Sholem Aleichem's Stempenyu, and depicted them in rich detail.[102]

In film

In literature

In Jewish literature, the klezmer was often represented as a romantic and somewhat unsavory figure.[104] However, in nineteenth century works by writers such as Mendele Mocher Sforim and Sholem Aleichem they were also portrayed as great artists and virtuosos who delighted the masses.[23] Klezmers also appeared in non-Jewish Eastern European literature, such as in the epic poem Pan Tadeusz, which depicted a character named Jankiel Cymbalist, or in the short stories of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch.[12] In George Eliot's Daniel Deronda (1876), the German Jewish music teacher is named Herr Julius Klesmer.[105] The novel was later adapted into a Yiddish musical by Avram Goldfaden titled Ben Ami (1908).[106]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Beregovsky, Moishe (1982). "4. Jewish Instrumental Folk Music (1937)". In Slobin, Mark (ed.). Old Jewish folk music : the collections and writings of Moshe Beregovski. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 530–48. ISBN 081227833X.
  2. ^ Rubin, Joel E. (2020). New York klezmer in the early twentieth century : the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras. Rochester, NY: Boydell & Brewer. p. 29. ISBN 9781580465984.
  3. ^ a b Slobin, Mark (2000). Fiddler on the move : exploring the klezmer world. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 7. ISBN 9780195161809.
  4. ^ Feldman, Zev (2016). Klezmer : music, history and memory. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 208–10. ISBN 9780190244514.
  5. ^ Rubin, Joel E. (2020). New York klezmer in the early twentieth century : the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras. Rochester, NY: Boydell & Brewer. pp. 71–4. ISBN 9781580465984.
  6. ^ Feldman, Zev (2016). Klezmer : music, history and memory. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 216–8. ISBN 9780190244514.
  7. ^ Feldman, Walter Zev. "Music: Traditional and Instrumental Music". YIVO Encyclopedia. YIVO.
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External links

  • YIVO Encyclopedia article on Traditional and Instrumental Music of Eastern European Jews
  • KlezKanada, Yiddish Summer Weimar, Yiddish New York, festivals where klezmer music is taught
  • Klezmer Institute, an academic group aiming to study and discuss klezmer
  • Yiddish American Popular Sheet Music, a collection of public domain and unpublished scores in the Library of Congress, including the handwritten scores of a number of early American klezmer artists
  • Mayrent Collection of Yiddish recordings, an open archive of digitized Yiddish and klezmer recordings
  • KlezmerGuide.com. Comprehensive cross-reference to klezmer recordings and sheet music sources
  • Klezmer Podcast and Radiant Others, two podcasts (currently inactive) which interviewed klezmer performers and scholars

klezmer, 2015, drama, film, film, yiddish, קלעזמער, לי, זמר, instrumental, musical, tradition, ashkenazi, jews, central, eastern, europe, essential, elements, tradition, include, dance, tunes, ritual, melodies, virtuosic, improvisations, played, listening, the. For the 2015 war drama film see Klezmer film Klezmer Yiddish קלעזמער or כ לי זמר is an instrumental musical tradition of the Ashkenazi Jews of Central and Eastern Europe The essential elements of the tradition include dance tunes ritual melodies and virtuosic improvisations played for listening these would have been played at weddings and other social functions 1 2 The musical genre incorporated elements of many other musical genres including Ottoman especially Greek and Romanian music Baroque music German and Slavic folk dances and religious Jewish music 3 4 As the music arrived in the United States it lost some of its traditional ritual elements and adopted elements of American big band and popular music 5 6 Among the European born klezmers who popularized the genre in the United States in the 1910s and 1920s were Dave Tarras and Naftule Brandwein they were followed by American born musicians such as Max Epstein Sid Beckerman and Ray Musiker 7 KlezmerNative nameקלעזמערOther namesJewish instrumental folk music Freylekh musicStylistic originsOld European dance musicReligious Jewish musicRomanian musicUkrainian musicMoldavian musicBaroque musicOttoman musicGreek musicCultural originsAshkenazic Jewish ceremonies especially weddings in Eastern EuropeTypical instrumentsStandard orchestra instruments accordion cimbalomAfter the destruction of Jewish life in Eastern Europe during the Holocaust and a general fall in the popularity of klezmer music in the United States the music began to be popularized again in the late 1970s in the so called Klezmer Revival 8 During the 1980s and onwards musicians experimented with traditional and experimental forms of the genre releasing fusion albums combining the genre with jazz punk and other styles 9 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Musical elements 2 1 Style 2 2 Historical repertoire 2 2 1 Dances 2 2 2 Non dance repertoire 2 3 Orchestration 2 4 Melodic modes 2 4 1 Western Cantorial and Ottoman music terminology 2 4 2 Description 3 History 3 1 Europe 3 1 1 Development of the genre 3 1 2 The Eastern European klezmer profession 1700 1930s 3 1 3 Klezmer in the late Russian empire and Soviet era 3 2 United States 3 2 1 Early American klezmer 1880s 1910s 3 2 2 Big band klezmer orchestras 1910s 1920s 3 2 3 Celebrity clarinetists 3 2 4 Klezmer revival 4 Popular culture 4 1 In music 4 2 In visual art 4 3 In film 4 4 In literature 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEtymology EditThe term klezmer as used in the Yiddish language has a Hebrew etymology klei meaning tools utensils or instruments of and zemer melody leading to k lei zemer כ ל י ז מ ר meaning musical instruments 10 This expression would have been familiar to literate Jews across the diaspora not only Ashkenazi Jews in Eastern Europe 11 Over time the usage of klezmer in a Yiddish context evolved to describe musicians instead of their instruments first in Bohemia in the second half of the sixteenth century and then in Poland possibly as a response to the new status of the musicians who were at that time forming professional guilds 11 Previously the musician may have been referred to as a lets לץ or other terms 12 13 After the term klezmer became the preferred term for these professional musicians in Yiddish speaking Eastern Europe other types of musicians were more commonly known as muziker or muzikant It was not until the late 20th century that the word Klezmer became a commonly known English language term 14 During that time through metonymy it came to refer not only to the musician but to the musical genre they played a meaning which it had not had in Yiddish 15 16 Early 20th century recording industry materials and other writings had referred to it as Hebrew Jewish or Yiddish dance music or sometimes using the Yiddish term Freilech music Cheerful music Twentieth century Russian scholars sometimes used the term Klezmer Ivan Lipaev did not use it but Moisei Beregovsky did when publishing in Yiddish or Ukrainian 11 The first citation needed postwar recordings to use the term klezmer to refer to the music were The Klezmorim s East Side Wedding and Streets of Gold in 1977 78 followed by Andy Statman and Zev Feldman s Jewish Klezmer Music in 1979 citation needed Musical elements EditStyle Edit The traditional style of playing Klezmer music including tone typical cadences and ornamentation sets it apart from other genres 17 Although Klezmer music emerged out of a larger Eastern European Jewish musical culture that included Jewish cantorial music Hasidic Nigns and later Yiddish theatre music it also borrowed from the surrounding folk musics of Central and Eastern Europe and from cosmopolitan European musical forms 3 Therefore it evolved into an overall style which has recognizable elements from all of those other genres Few klezmer musicians before the late nineteenth century had formal musical training but they inherited a rich tradition with its own advanced musical techniques each musician had their understanding of how the style should be correctly performed 18 17 The usage of these ornaments was not random the matters of taste self expression variation and restraint were and remain important elements of how to interpret the music 17 Klezmer musicians apply the overall style to available specific techniques on each melodic instrument They incorporate and elaborate the vocal melodies of Jewish religious practice including khazones davenen and paraliturgical song extending the range of human voice into the musical expression possible on instruments 19 Among those stylistic elements that are considered typically Jewish in Klezmer music are those which are shared with cantorial or Hasidic vocal ornaments including dreydlekh tear in the voice and imitations of sighing or laughing laughter through tears 20 Various Yiddish terms were used for these vocal like ornaments such as קרעכץ Krekhts groan or moan קנײטש kneytsh wrinkle or fold and קװעטש kvetsh pressure or stress 10 Other ornaments such as trills grace notes appoggiaturas pedal notes mordents slides and typical Klezmer cadences are also important to the style 17 In particular the cadences which draw on religious Jewish music identify a piece more strongly as a Klezmer tune even if its broader structure was borrowed from a non Jewish source 21 Unlike in Classical music vibrato is used more sparingly and is treated as another type of ornament 20 17 The accompaniment style of the accompanist or orchestra could be fairly impromptu called צוהא לטן tsuhaltn holding onto 22 Historical repertoire Edit The repertoire of Klezmer musicians was very diverse and tied to specific social functions and dances especially of the traditional wedding 1 These melodies might have a non Jewish origin or have been composed by a Klezmer but only rarely are they attributed to a specific composer 23 Generally Klezmer music can be divided into two broad categories music for specific dances and music for listening at the table in processions ceremonial etc 23 Dances Edit Freylekhs The simplest and most widespread type of Klezmer dance tune are those played in 24 and intended for group circle dances Depending on the location this basic dance may also have been called a Redl circle Hopke Karahod round dance literally the Belarusian translation of the Russian khorovod Dreydl Rikudl etc 1 24 22 10 Bulgar Sher is a Contra dance in 24 Beregovsky writing in the 1930s noted that despite the dance being very commonly played across a wide area and that he suspected it had its roots in an older German dance 1 This dance continued to be known in the United States even after other complex European Klezmer dances had been forgotten 25 Khosidl or khusidl named after the Hasidic Jews who danced it is a more dignified embellished dance in 24 or 44 The dance steps can be performed in a circle or in a line Hora or zhok is a Romanian style dance in a hobbling 38 time with beats on 1 and 3 and is even more embellished The Israeli hora derives its roots from the Romanian hora The Yiddish name zhok comes from the Romanian Joc literally dance Broygez tants 23 Kolomeike is a fast and catchy dance in 24 time which originated in Ukraine and is prominent in the folk music of that country Skotshne is generally thought to be a more elaborate Freylekhs which could be played either for dancing or listening 1 Nigun a very broad term which can refer to melodies for listening singing or dancing 10 Usually a mid paced song in 24 Waltzes were very popular whether classical Russian or Polish A padespan was a sort of Russian Spanish waltz known to klezmers Mazurka and polka Polish and Czech dances respectively were often played for both Jews and Gentiles Sirba a Romanian dance in 22 or 24 Romanian sarbă It features hopping steps and short bursts of running accompanied by triplets in the melody Non dance repertoire Edit The Doyne is a freeform instrumental form borrowed from the Romanian shepherd s Doina Although there are many regional types of Doina in Romania and Moldova the Jewish form is typically simpler with a minor key theme which is then repeated in a major key followed by a Freylekhs 23 A Volekhl is a related genre 10 Tish nign table tune 10 Moralish a type of Nigun called Devekut in Hebrew which inspires spiritual arousal or a pious mood 10 22 A Vals Waltz pieces in 34 especially in the Hasidic context may be slower than non Jewish waltzes and intended for listening while the wedding parties are seated at their tables 10 Forms centering on bridal rituals including Kale bazetsn seating of the bride A Marsh March can be non Jewish march melodies adapted into joyful singing or playing contexts 10 Processional melodies including Gas nigunim street tunes Tsum tish to the table According to Beregovski the Gas nign was always in 34 time 23 The Taksim whose name is borrowed from the Ottoman Arab Taqsim is a freeform fantasy on a particular motif ornemented with trills roulades and so on it usually ends with a Freylekhs 23 By the twentieth century it has mostly become obsolete and was replaced by the Doina 26 Fantazi or fantasy is a freeform song traditionally played at Jewish weddings to the guests as they dined It resembles the fantasia of light classical music A Terkisher is a type of virtuosic solo piece in 44 performed by leading klezmorim such as Dave Tarras and Naftule Brandwein There is no dance for this type of melody rather it references an Ottoman or oriental style and melodies may incorporate references to Greek Hasapiko into a Ashkenazic musical aesthetic Parting melodies played at the beginning or end of a wedding day such as the Zay gezunt be healthy Gas nign Dobriden good day Dobranotsh or A gute nakht good night etc 23 27 These types of pieces were sometimes in 34 which may have given an air of dignity and seriousness 28 Orchestration Edit Klezmer music is an instrumental tradition without much of a history of songs or singing In Eastern Europe Klezmers did traditionally accompany the vocal stylings of the Badchen wedding entertainer although their performances were typically improvised couplets and the calling of ceremonies rather than songs 29 30 The importance of the Badchen gradually decreased by the twentieth century although they still continued in some traditions 31 As for the klezmer orchestra its size and composition varied by time and place The Klezmer bands of the eighteenth and early nineteenth century were small with roughly three to five musicians playing Woodwind or String instruments 18 Another common configuration in that era was similar to Hungarian bands today typically a lead violinist second violin cello and Cimbalom 32 33 In the mid nineteenth century the Clarinet started to appear in those small Klezmer ensembles as well 34 By the last decades of the century in Ukraine the orchestras had grown larger averaging seven to twelve members and incorporating Brass instruments and up to twenty for a prestigious occasion 35 36 However for poor weddings a large Klezmer ensemble might only send three or four of its junior members 35 In these larger orchestras on top of the core instrumentation of strings and woodwinds cornets C clarinets trombones a contrabass a large Turkish drum and several extra violins 23 The inclusion of Jews in tsarist army bands during the 19th century may also have led to the introduction of typical military band instruments into klezmer With such large orchestras the music was arranged so that the bandleader soloist could still be heard at key moments 37 In Galicia and Belarus the smaller string ensemble with cimbalom remained the norm into the twentieth century 38 23 American Klezmer as it developed in dancehalls and wedding banquets of the early twentieth century had a more complete orchestration not unlike those used in popular orchestras of the time They use a clarinet saxophone or trumpet for the melody and make great use of the trombone for slides and other flourishes Jewish musicians of Rohatyn west Ukraine The melody in Klezmer music is generally assigned to the lead violin although occasionally the flute and eventually clarinet 23 The other instrumentalists provide harmony rhythm and some counterpoint the latter usually coming from the second violin or viola The clarinet now often played the melody Brass instruments such as the French valved cornet and keyed German trumpet eventually inherited a counter voice role 39 Modern klezmer instrumentation is more commonly influenced by the instruments of the 19th century military bands than the earlier orchestras Percussion in early 20th century klezmer recordings was generally minimal no more than a wood block or snare drum In Eastern Europe percussion was often provided by a drummer who played a frame drum or poyk sometimes called baraban A poyk is similar to a bass drum and often has a cymbal or piece of metal mounted on top which is struck by a beater or a small cymbal strapped to the hand Melodic modes Edit Western Cantorial and Ottoman music terminology Edit Klezmer music is a genre that developed partly in the Western musical tradition but also in the Ottoman Empire and is primarily an oral tradition which does not have a well established literature to explain its modes and modal progression 40 41 But as with other types of Ashkenazic Jewish music it has a complex system of modes which were used in its compositions 10 42 Many of its melodies do not fit well in the major and minor terminology used in Western music nor is the music systematically microtonal in the way that Middle Eastern music is 40 Nusach terminology as developed for Cantorial music in the nineteenth century is often used instead and indeed many Klezmer compositions draw heavily on religious music 27 But it also incorporates elements of Baroque and Eastern European folk musics making description based only on religious terminology incomplete 21 22 43 Still since the Klezmer revival of the 1970s the terms for Jewish prayer modes are the most common to describe the those used in klezmer 44 The terms used in Yiddish for these modes include Nusach נוסח shteyger שטײגער manner mode of life which describes the typical melodic character important notes and scale and gust גוסט a word meaning taste which was commonly used by Moisei Beregovsky 22 23 41 Beregovsky who was writing in the Stalinist era and was constrained by having to downplay Klezmer s religious aspects did not use the terminology of Synagogue modes except in some early work in 1929 Instead he relied on German inspired musical terminology of major minor and other modes which he described in technical terms 23 45 In his 1940s works he noted that the majority of the klezmer repertoire seemed to be in a minor key whether Natural minor or others that around a quarter of the material was in Freygish and that around a fifth of the repertoire was in a Major key 23 Another set of terminology sometimes used to describe klezmer music is that of the Makams used in Ottoman and other Middle Eastern music 44 46 This approach dates back to Idelsohn in the early twentieth century who was very familiar with Middle Eastern music and has been developed in the past decade by Joshua Horowitz 47 43 44 40 Finally some Klezmer music and especially those composed in the United States from the mid twentieth century onwards may not be composed with these traditional modes but rather built around chords 21 Description Edit Because there is no agreed upon complete system for describing modes in Klezmer music this list is imperfect and may conflate concepts which some scholars view as separate 42 47 Another problem in listing these terms as simple eight note octatonic scales is that it makes it harder to see how Klezmer melodic structures can work as five note pentachords how parts of different modes typically interact and what the cultural significance of a given mode might be in a traditional Klezmer context 40 41 Freygish mode in C Freygish Ahavo Rabboh or Phrygian dominant scale resembles the Phrygian mode having a flat second but also a permanent raised third 48 It is among the most common modes in Klezmer and is closely identified with Jewish identity Beregovsky estimated that roughly a quarter of the Klezmer music he had collected was in Freygish 23 40 Among the most well known pieces composed in this mode are Hava Nagila and Ma yofus It is comparable to the Maqam Hijaz found in Arabic music 40 Mi Sheberakh mode in C Mi Sheberakh Av HaRachamim altered Dorian or Ukrainian Dorian scale is a minor mode which has a raised fourth 48 It is sometimes compared to Nikriz Makami It is closely related to Freygish since they share the same pitch intervals 40 This mode is often encountered in Doynes and other Klezmer forms with connections to Romanian or Ukrainian music Adonoy Molokh mode in C Adonoy Molokh or Adoyshem Molokh a synagogue mode with a flatted seventh 22 It is sometimes called the Jewish major 47 It has some similarities to the Mixolydian mode 48 Mogen Ovos mode in C Mogen Ovos is a synagogue mode which resembles the Western Natural minor 22 In klezmer music it is often found in greeting and parting pieces as well as dance tunes 40 It has some similarities to the Bayati maqam used in Arabic and Turkish music Yishtabakh resembles Mogen Ovos and Freygish It is a variant of the Mogen Ovos scale that frequently flattens the second and fifth degrees 49 History EditEurope Edit Development of the genre Edit The Bible has several descriptions of orchestras and Levites making music but after the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE many Rabbis discouraged musical instruments 50 Therefore while there may have been Jewish musicians in different times and places since then the Klezmer arose much more recently 51 The earliest written record of the use of the word was identified by Isaac Rivkind he as being in a Jewish council meeting from Krakow in 1595 52 53 They may have existed even earlier in Prague as references to them have been found as early as 1511 and 1533 54 It was in the 1600s that the situation of Jewish musicians in Poland improved as they gained the right to form Guilds Khevre and therefore to set their own fees hire Christians and so on 55 Therefore over time this new form of professional musician developed new forms of music and elaborated this tradition across a wide area of Eastern European Jewish life The rise of Hasidic Judaism in the sixteenth century and onwards also contributed to the development of klezmer due to their emphasis on dancing and wordless melodies as a component of Jewish practice 16 Medieval Jewish wedding procession date unknown The Eastern European klezmer profession 1700 1930s Edit Portrait of Pedotser A M Kholodenko nineteenth century klezmer virtuoso The nineteenth century also saw the rise of a number of klezmer violin virtuosos who combined the techniques of classical violinists such as Ivan Khandoshkin and of Bessarabian folk violinists and who composed dance and display pieces that became widespread even after the composers were gone 56 Among these figures were Aron Moyshe Kholodenko Pedotser Yosef Drucker Stempenyu Alter Goyzman Alter Chudnover and Josef Gusikov 57 58 59 60 Unlike in the United States where there was a robust Klezmer recording industry there was relatively less recorded in Europe in the early twentieth century The majority of European recordings of Jewish music consisted of Cantorial and Yiddish Theatre music with only a few dozen known to exist of Klezmer music 61 These include violin pieces by artists such as Oscar Zehngut H Steiner Leon Ahl and Josef Solinski flute pieces by S Kosch and ensemble recordings by Belf s Romanian Orchestra the Russian Jewish Orchestra Jewish Wedding Orchestra and Titunshnayder s Orchestra 61 62 Klezmer in the late Russian empire and Soviet era Edit The loosening of restrictions on Jews in the Russian Empire and their newfound access to academic and conservatory training created a class of scholars who began to reexamine and evaluate klezmer using modern techniques 23 Abraham Zevi Idelsohn was one such figure who sought to find an ancient Middle Eastern origin for Jewish music in the diaspora 63 There was also new interest in collecting and studying Jewish music and folklore including Yiddish songs folk tales and instrumental music An early expedition was by Joel Engel who collected folk melodies in his birthplace of Berdyansk in 1900 The first figure to collect large amounts of klezmer music was Susman Kiselgof who made several expeditions to the Pale of Settlement from 1907 to 1915 64 He was soon followed by other scholars such as Moisei Beregovsky and Sofia Magid Soviet scholars of Yiddish and klezmer music 65 23 Most of the materials collected in those expeditions are now held by the Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine 66 Klezmer musicians at a wedding Ukraine ca 1925Beregovsky writing in the late 1930s lamented how little scholars knew about the range of playing technique and social context of Klezmers from past eras except for the late nineteenth century which could be investigated through elderly musicians who still remembered it 1 Jewish music in the Soviet Union and the continued use of Klezmer music went through several phases of official support or censorship The officially supported Soviet Jewish musical culture of 1920s involved works based on or satirizing traditional melodies and themes whereas those of the 1930s were often Russian cultural works translated into a Yiddish context 67 After 1948 Soviet Jewish culture entered a phase of repression meaning that Jewish music concerts whether tied to Hebrew Yiddish or instrumental Klezmer were no longer allowed to be performed 68 Moisei Beregovsky s academic work was shut down in 1949 and he was arrested and deported to Siberia in 1951 69 70 The repression was eased in the mid 1950s as some Jewish and Yiddish performances were allowed to return to the stage once again 71 However the main venue for Klezmer has always been traditional community events weddings and not the concert stage or academic institute those traditional venues were repressed along with Jewish culture in general according to anti religious Soviet policy 72 United States Edit Early American klezmer 1880s 1910s Edit The first klezmers to arrive in the United States followed the first large waves of Eastern European Jewish immigration which began after 1880 establishing themselves mainly in large cities like New York Philadelphia and Boston 16 Klezmers often younger members of klezmer families or less established musicians started to arrive from the Russian Empire the Kingdom of Romania and Austria Hungary 73 Some of them found work in restaurants dance halls union rallies wine cellars and other modern venues in places like New York s Lower East Side 74 75 But the major source of income for klezmer musicians seems to have remained weddings and Simchas as in Europe 76 Those early generations of klezmers are much more poorly documented than those working in the 1910s and 1920s many never recorded or published music although some are remembered through family or community history such as the Lemish klezmer family of Iași Romania who arrived in Philadelphia in the 1880s and established a klezmer dynasty there 77 76 Big band klezmer orchestras 1910s 1920s Edit Max Leibowitz orchestra from 1921 The vitality of the Jewish music industry in major American cities attracted ever more klezmers from Europe in the 1910s This coincided with the development of the recording industry which recorded a number of these klezmer orchestras By the time of the First World War the industry turned its attention to ethnic dance music and a number of bandleaders were hired by record companies such as Edison Records Emerson Records Okeh Records and the Victor Recording Company to record 78 rpm discs 78 The first of these was Abe Elenkrig a barber and cornet player from a klezmer family in Ukraine whose 1913 recording Fon der Choope From the Wedding has been recognized by the Library of Congress 79 80 81 Among the European born klezmers recording during that decade were some from the Ukrainian territory of the Russian Empire Abe Elenkrig Dave Tarras Shloimke Beckerman Joseph Frankel and Israel J Hochman some from Austro Hungarian Galicia Naftule Brandwein Harry Kandel and Berish Katz and some from Romania Abe Schwartz Max Leibowitz Max Yankowitz Joseph Moskowitz 82 83 84 85 The mid 1920s also saw a number of popular novelty Klezmer groups which performed on the radio or Vaudeville stages These included Joseph Cherniavsky s Yiddish American Jazz Band whose members would dress as parodies of Cossacks or Hasidim 86 Another such group was the Boibriker Kapelle which performed on the radio and in concerts trying to recreate a nostalgic old fashioned Galician Klezmer sound 87 With the passing of the Immigration Act of 1924 which greatly restricted Jewish immigration from Europe and then the onset of the Great Depression by 1930 the market for Yiddish and klezmer recordings in the United States saw a steep decline which essentially ended the recording career of many of the popular bandleaders of the 1910s and 1920s and made the Large klezmer orchestra less viable 88 Celebrity clarinetists Edit Along with the rise of klezmer big bands in the 1910s and 1920s a handful of Jewish clarinet players who had led those bands became celebrities in their own right with a legacy that lasted into subsequent decades The most popular among these were Naftule Brandwein Dave Tarras and Shloimke Beckerman 89 90 91 Klezmer revival Edit In the mid to late 1970s there was a klezmer revival in the United States and Europe led by Giora Feidman The Klezmorim Zev Feldman Andy Statman and the Klezmer Conservatory Band They drew their repertoire from recordings and surviving musicians of U S klezmer 92 In particular clarinetists such as Dave Tarras and Max Epstein became mentors to this new generation of klezmer musicians 93 In 1985 Henry Sapoznik and Adrienne Cooper founded KlezKamp to teach klezmer and other Yiddish music 94 Elane Hoffman Watts klezmer drummer in 2007 The 1980s saw a second wave of revival as interest grew in more traditionally inspired performances with string instruments largely with non Jews of the United States and Germany Musicians began to track down older European klezmer by listening to recordings finding transcriptions and making field recordings of the few klezmorim left in Eastern Europe Key performers in this style are Joel Rubin Budowitz Khevrisa Di Naye Kapelye Yale Strom The Chicago Klezmer Ensemble The Maxwell Street Klezmer Band the violinists Alicia Svigals Steven Greenman 95 Cookie Segelstein and Elie Rosenblatt flutist Adrianne Greenbaum and tsimbl player Pete Rushefsky Bands like Brave Old World Hot Pstromi and The Klezmatics also emerged during this period In the 1990s musicians from the San Francisco Bay Area helped further interest in klezmer music by taking it into new territory Groups such as the New Klezmer Trio inspired a new wave of bands merging klezmer with other forms of music such as John Zorn s Masada and Bar Kokhba Naftule s Dream Don Byron s Mickey Katz project and violinist Daniel Hoffman s klezmer jazz Middle Eastern fusion band Davka 92 The New Orleans Klezmer All Stars 96 also formed in 1991 with a mixture of New Orleans funk jazz and klezmer styles Starting in 2008 The Other Europeans project funded by several EU cultural institutions 97 spent a year doing intensive field research in Moldavia under the leadership of Alan Bern and scholar Zev Feldman They wanted to explore klezmer and lautari roots and fuse the music of the two other European groups The resulting band now performs internationally A separate klezmer tradition had developed in Israel in the 20th century Clarinetists Moshe Berlin and Avrum Leib Burstein are known exponents of the klezmer style in Israel To preserve and promote klezmer music in Israel Burstein founded the Jerusalem Klezmer Association which has become a center for learning and performance of Klezmer music in the country 98 Popular culture EditIn music Edit While traditional performances may have been on the decline many Jewish composers who had mainstream success such as Leonard Bernstein and Aaron Copland continued to be influenced by the klezmeric idioms heard during their youth as Gustav Mahler had been George Gershwin was familiar with klezmer music and the opening clarinet glissando of Rhapsody in Blue suggests this influence although the composer did not compose klezmer directly 99 Some clarinet stylings of swing jazz bandleaders Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw can be interpreted as having been derived from klezmer as can the freilach swing playing of other Jewish artists of the period such as trumpeter Ziggy Elman At the same time non Jewish composers were also turning to klezmer for a prolific source of fascinating thematic material Dmitri Shostakovich in particular admired klezmer music for embracing both the ecstasy and the despair of human life and quoted several melodies in his chamber masterpieces the Piano Quintet in G minor op 57 1940 the Piano Trio No 2 in E minor op 67 1944 and the String Quartet No 8 in C minor op 110 1960 The compositions of Israeli born composer Ofer Ben Amots incorporate aspects of klezmer music most notably his 2006 composition Klezmer Concerto The piece is for klezmer clarinet written for Jewish clarinetist David Krakauer 100 string orchestra harp and percussion 101 In visual art Edit Issachar Ber Ryback Wedding Ceremony The figure of the klezmer as a romantic symbol of nineteenth century Jewish life appeared in the art of a number of twentieth century Jewish artists such as Anatoli Lvovich Kaplan Issachar Ber Ryback Marc Chagall and Chaim Goldberg Kaplan making his art in the Soviet Union was quite taken by the romantic images of the Klezmer in literature and in particular in Sholem Aleichem s Stempenyu and depicted them in rich detail 102 In film Edit Yidl Mitn Fidl 1936 directed by Joseph Green Fiddler on the Roof 1971 directed by Norman Jewison Les Aventures de Rabbi Jacob 1973 directed by Gerard Oury Jewish Soul Music The Art of Giora Feidman 1980 directed by Uri Barbash A Jumpin Night in the Garden of Eden 1988 directed by Michal Goldman Fiddlers on the Hoof 1989 directed by Simon Broughton The Last Klezmer Leopold Kozlowski His Life and Music 1994 directed by Yale Strom Beyond Silence 1996 about a Klezmer playing clarinettist directed by Charlotte Link A Tickle in the Heart 1996 directed by Stefan Schwietert 103 Itzhak Perlman In the Fiddler s House 1996 aired 29 June 1996 on Great Performances PBS WNET television series L homme est une femme comme les autres 1998 directed by Jean Jacques Zilbermann with soundtrack by Giora Feidman Dummy 2002 directed by Greg Pritikin Klezmer on Fish Street 2003 directed by Yale Strom Le Tango des Rashevski 2003 directed by Sam Garbarski Klezmer in Germany 2007 directed by Kryzstof Zanussi and C Goldie A Great Day on Eldridge Street 2008 directed by Yale Strom The Socalled Movie 2010 directed by Garry BeitelIn literature Edit In Jewish literature the klezmer was often represented as a romantic and somewhat unsavory figure 104 However in nineteenth century works by writers such as Mendele Mocher Sforim and Sholem Aleichem they were also portrayed as great artists and virtuosos who delighted the masses 23 Klezmers also appeared in non Jewish Eastern European literature such as in the epic poem Pan Tadeusz which depicted a character named Jankiel Cymbalist or in the short stories of Leopold von Sacher Masoch 12 In George Eliot s Daniel Deronda 1876 the German Jewish music teacher is named Herr Julius Klesmer 105 The novel was later adapted into a Yiddish musical by Avram Goldfaden titled Ben Ami 1908 106 See also EditKlezmer fiddle List of klezmer bands List of klezmer musicians Secular Jewish musicReferences Edit a b c d e f Beregovsky Moishe 1982 4 Jewish Instrumental Folk Music 1937 In Slobin Mark ed Old Jewish folk music the collections and writings of Moshe Beregovski Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press pp 530 48 ISBN 081227833X Rubin Joel E 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Boydell amp Brewer p 29 ISBN 9781580465984 a b Slobin Mark 2000 Fiddler on the move exploring the klezmer world Oxford Oxford University Press p 7 ISBN 9780195161809 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 208 10 ISBN 9780190244514 Rubin Joel E 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Boydell amp Brewer pp 71 4 ISBN 9781580465984 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 216 8 ISBN 9780190244514 Feldman Walter Zev Music Traditional and Instrumental Music YIVO Encyclopedia YIVO Kirshenblatt Gimblett Barbara 1998 Sounds of Sensibility Judaism 47 49 53 Kirshenblatt Gimblett Barbara 1998 Sounds of Sensibility Judaism 47 54 5 a b c d e f g h i j Mazor Yaacov Seroussi Edwin 1990 Towards a Hasidic Lexicon of Music Orbis Musicae 10 118 43 a b c Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 61 7 ISBN 9780190244521 a b Feldman Walter Zev Music Traditional and Instrumental Music YIVO Encyclopedia YIVO Institute Retrieved 20 June 2021 Liptzin Solomon 1972 A history of Yiddish literature Middle Village N Y Jonathan David ISBN 0824601246 Schultz Julia September 2019 The impact of Yiddish on the English language An overview of lexical borrowing in the variety of subject areas and spheres of life influenced by Yiddish over time English Today 35 3 2 7 doi 10 1017 S0266078418000494 S2CID 150270104 Slobin Mark 2000 Fiddler on the move exploring the klezmer world Oxford Oxford University Press p 6 ISBN 9780195161809 a b c Netsky Hankus Winter 1998 An overview of klezmer music and its development in the U S Judaism 47 1 5 12 a b c d e Rubin Joel E 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Boydell amp Brewer p 176 ISBN 9781580465984 a b Rubin Joel 2009 Like a String of Pearls Reflections on the Role of Brass Instrumentalists in Jewish Instrumental Klezmer Music and the Trope of Jewish Jazz In Weiner Howard T ed Early Twentieth Century Brass Idioms Lanham MD The Scarecrow Press pp 77 102 ISBN 978 0810862456 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press p 39 ISBN 9780190244514 a b Slobin Mark 2000 Fiddler on the move exploring the klezmer world Oxford Oxford University Press pp 98 122 ISBN 9780195161809 a b c Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 375 85 ISBN 9780190244521 a b c d e f g Avenary Hanoch 1960 The Musical Vocabulary of Ashkenazic Hazanim Studies in Biblical and Jewish Folklore Bloomington Indiana 187 198 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Beregovski M 1941 Yidishe klezmer zeyer shafn un shteyger Literarisher Alamanakh Sovetish in Yiddish Moscow Melukhe farlag Der Emes 12 412 450 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 275 98 ISBN 9780190244514 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 261 73 ISBN 9780190244514 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press p 147 ISBN 9780190244521 a b Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 220 7 ISBN 9780190244521 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 232 3 ISBN 9780190244521 Pietruszka Symcha 1932 Yudishe entsiḳlopedye far Yudishe geshikhṭe ḳulṭur religye filozofye liṭeraṭur biografye bibliografye un andere Yudishe inyonim in Yiddish Warshaw Yehudiyah pp 163 6 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 146 56 ISBN 9780190244514 Rubin Ruth 1973 Voices of a people the story of Yiddish folksong 2nd ed New York McGraw Hill p 251 ISBN 0070541949 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 100 111 ISBN 9780190244514 Gifford Paul M 2001 The hammered dulcimer a history Lanham Md Scarecrow Press pp 106 7 ISBN 9781461672906 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 111 3 ISBN 9780190244514 a b Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 93 6 ISBN 9780190244521 Levik Sergej Yurevich 1962 Zapiski opernogo pevca in Russian Iskusstvo pp 18 9 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press p 115 ISBN 9780190244514 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 100 16 ISBN 9780190244514 KLEZMER MUSIC users ch Retrieved 19 January 2016 a b c d e f g h Horowitz Joshua The Klezmer Ahava Rabboh Shteyger Mode Sub mode and Modal Progression PDF Budowitz com Retrieved 26 June 2021 a b c Rubin Joel E 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Boydell amp Brewer pp 122 74 ISBN 9781580465984 a b Tarsi Boaz Full Text Cross Repertoire Motifs in Liturgical Music of the Ashkenazi Tradition An Initial Lay of the Land by Boaz Tarsi Jewish Music Research Centre Retrieved 27 June 2021 a b Frigyesi Judit Laki 1982 1983 Modulation as an Integral Part of the Modal System in Jewish Music Musica Judaica 5 1 52 71 JSTOR 23687593 a b c Rubin Joel E 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Boydell amp Brewer p 361 ISBN 9781580465984 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press p 40 ISBN 9780190244521 Alford Fowler Julia May 2013 Chasing Yiddishkayt A concerto in the context of Klezmer music PDF Doctoral thesis Temple University Retrieved 16 June 2021 a b c Tarsi Boaz 3 July 2017 At the Intersection of Music Theory and Ideology A Z Idelsohn and the Ashkenazi Prayer Mode Magen Avot Journal of Musicological Research 36 3 208 233 doi 10 1080 01411896 2017 1340033 ISSN 0141 1896 S2CID 148956696 a b c Rubin Joel E 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Boydell amp Brewer p 364 ISBN 9781580465984 Horowitz Josh The Main Klezmer Modes Ari Davidow s Klezmer Shack Retrieved 24 June 2022 Netsky Hankus 2015 Klezmer Music and Community in Twentieth Century Jewish Philadelphia Philadelphia Temple University Press pp 19 21 ISBN 9781439909034 Stutchewsky Joachim 1959 הכליזמרים תולדותיהם אורח חיים ויצירותיהם in Hebrew Jerusalem Bialik Institute pp 29 45 Rivkind Isaac 1960 Pereq be Toldot Ha Amanut Ha Amamit in Hebrew New York Futuro Press p 16 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 62 3 ISBN 9780190244521 Zaagsma Gerben 2000 The Klezmorim of Prague About a Jewish Musicians Guild East European Meetings in Ethnomusicology 7 41 47 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press pp 71 3 ISBN 9780190244521 Horowitz Joshua 2012 9 The Klezmer Accordion In Simonett Helena ed The accordion in the Americas klezmer polka tango zydeco and more Urbana University of Illinois Press p 195 ISBN 9780252094323 Stutchewsky Joachim 1959 הכליזמרים תולדותיהם אורח חיים ויצירותיהם in Hebrew Jerusalem Bialik Institute pp 110 4 Rubin Joel 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Rochester University p 28 ISBN 9781580465984 Beregovski Moshe Rothstein Robert Bjorling Kurt Alpert Michael Slobin Mark 2020 Jewish instrumental folk music the collections and writings of Moshe Beregovski Second ed Evanston Illinois pp I7 I9 ISBN 9781732618107 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press p 149 ISBN 9780190244514 a b Wollock Jeffrey Spring 1997 European Recordings of Jewish Instrumental Folk Music 1911 1914 ARSC Journal 28 1 36 55 Rubin Joel Aylward Michael 2019 Chekhov s Band Eastern European Klezmer Music from the EMI archives 1908 1913 CD London Renair Records Netsky Hankus 2015 Klezmer Music and Community in Twentieth Century Jewish Philadelphia Philadelphia Temple University Press pp 10 1 ISBN 9781439909034 Sholokhova Lyudmila 2004 Zinoviy Kiselhof as a Founder of Jewish Musical Folklore Studies in the Russian Empire at the Beginning of the 20th Century In Grozinger Karl Erich ed Klesmer Klassik jiddisches Lied judische Musikkultur in Osteuropa Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 63 72 ISBN 9783447050319 Grozinger Elvira 2008 Unser Rebbe unser Stalin jiddische Lieder aus den St Petersburger Sammlungen von Moishe Beregowski 1892 1961 und Sofia Magid 1892 1954 Einleitung Texte Noten mit DVD Verzeichnis der gesamten weiteren 416 Titel Tondokumente der bearbeiteten und nichtbearbeiteten Lieder Wiesbaden Harrassowitz pp 40 3 ISBN 9783447056892 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press p 24 ISBN 9780190244521 Shternshis Anna 2006 Soviet and kosher Jewish popular culture in the Soviet Union 1923 1939 Bloomington Indiana University Press pp xv xx ISBN 0253347262 Wollock Jeffrey Spring 2003 Soviet Recordings of Jewish Instrumental Folk Music 1937 1939 ARSC Journal Annapolis MD 34 1 14 32 Sholokhova Lyudmila Beregovskii Moisei Iakovlevich YIVO Encyclopedia YIVO Institute Retrieved 8 July 2021 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press p 129 ISBN 9780190244514 Estraikh Gennady 2008 Yiddish in the Cold War London Routledge p 57 ISBN 9781351194471 Shternshis Anna 2006 Soviet and kosher Jewish popular culture in the Soviet Union 1923 1939 Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 3 4 ISBN 0253347262 Rubin Joel E 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Boydell amp Brewer p 39 ISBN 9781580465984 Heskes Irene 1995 Yiddish American popular songs 1895 to 1950 a catalog based on the Lawrence Marwick roster of copyright entries Washington D C Library of Congress pp xix xxi ISBN 0844407453 Rubin Joel E 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Boydell amp Brewer p 36 ISBN 9781580465984 a b Loeffler James 2002 3 Di Rusishe Progresiv Muzikal Yunyon No 1 fun Amerike The First Klezmer Union in America In Slobin Mark ed American Klezmer its roots and offshoots University of California Press pp 35 51 ISBN 978 0 520 22717 0 Netsky Hankus 2015 Klezmer Music and Community in Twentieth Century Jewish Philadelphia Philadelphia Temple University Press pp 98 9 ISBN 978 1 4399 0903 4 Columbia Repertoire History Foreign Language Recordings Discography of American Historical Recordings Discography of American Historical Recordings Retrieved 12 February 2021 The Sounds of Fighting Men Howlin Wolf and Comedy Icon Among 25 Named to the National Recording Registry Library of Congress Retrieved 13 February 2021 Sapoznik Henry 1999 Klezmer Jewish music from Old World to our world Schirmer Books p 68 ISBN 9780028645742 Netsky Dr Hankus Fon der Choope From the Wedding Abe Elenkrig s Yidishe Orchestra April 4 1913 PDF Library of Congress Retrieved 19 June 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Heskes Irene 1995 Yiddish American popular songs 1895 to 1950 a catalog based on the Lawrence Marwick roster of copyright entries Washington D C Library of Congress p xxxiv ISBN 0844407453 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press p 279 ISBN 9780190244514 Lt Joseph Frankel s Orchestra Discography of American Historical Recordings Discography of American Historical Recordings Sapoznik Henry 1999 Klezmer Jewish music from Old World to our world New York Schirmer Books pp 87 94 ISBN 9780028645742 Sapoznik Henry 2006 Klezmer Jewish music from Old World to our world 2nd ed New York Schirmer Trade Books pp 107 11 ISBN 9780825673245 Wollock Jeffrey 2007 Historic Records as Historical Records Hersh Gross and His Boiberiker Kapelye 1927 1932 PDF ARSC Journal 38 1 44 106 Rubin Joel E 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Boydell amp Brewer pp 260 3 ISBN 9781787448315 Sapoznik Henry 2006 Klezmer Jewish music from Old World to our world 2nd ed New York Schirmer Trade Books pp 99 109 ISBN 9780825673245 Jews and American popular culture Westport Conn Praeger Publishers 2007 p 86 ISBN 9780275987954 Rubin Joel 2020 New York klezmer in the early twentieth century the music of Naftule Brandwein and Dave Tarras Rochester NY Rochester University pp 2 4 ISBN 9781580465984 a b Kirshenblatt Gimblett Barbara 1998 Sounds of sensibility Judaism A Quarterly Journal of Jewish Life and Thought 47 1 49 79 Netsky Hankus 2015 Klezmer Music and Community in Twentieth Century Jewish Philadelphia Philadelphia Temple University Press pp 4 5 ISBN 9781439909034 Slobin Mark 2000 Fiddler on the move exploring the klezmer world Oxford Oxford University Press p 4 ISBN 9780195161809 Steven Greenman stevengreenman com Retrieved 19 January 2016 Home klezmers com The Other Europeans other europeans band eu Archived from the original on 30 April 2011 Retrieved 19 January 2016 The Jerusalem Klezmer Association Rogovoy S 2000 The Essential Klezmer Algonquin Books p 71 ISBN 978 1 56512 863 7 Retrieved 1 May 2017 Ofer Ben Amots The Klezmer Concerto Bernstein Artists Inc 2006 Archived from the original on 6 June 2014 Retrieved 6 June 2014 Ben Amots Ofer 2006 Klezmer Concerto Colorado Springs The Composer s Own Press ISBN 978 1 939382 07 8 Suris B D 1972 Anatolij Lvovich Kaplan Anatoliĭ Lʹvovich Kaplan Leningrad Khudozhnik RSFSR pp 234 6 Rubin Joel Ottens Rita 15 May 2000 A Tickle in the Heart Archived from the original on 4 April 2009 Netsky Hankus 2015 Klezmer Music and Community in Twentieth Century Jewish Philadelphia Philadelphia Temple University Press p 9 ISBN 9781439909034 Feldman Zev 2016 Klezmer music history and memory New York NY Oxford University Press p 60 ISBN 9780190244521 Heskes Irene 1995 Yiddish American popular songs 1895 to 1950 a catalog based on the Lawrence Marwick roster of copyright entries Washington D C Library of Congress p xix ISBN 0844407453 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Klezmer YIVO Encyclopedia article on Traditional and Instrumental Music of Eastern European Jews KlezKanada Yiddish Summer Weimar Yiddish New York festivals where klezmer music is taught Klezmer Institute an academic group aiming to study and discuss klezmer Yiddish American Popular Sheet Music a collection of public domain and unpublished scores in the Library of Congress including the handwritten scores of a number of early American klezmer artists Mayrent Collection of Yiddish recordings an open archive of digitized Yiddish and klezmer recordings KlezmerGuide com Comprehensive cross reference to klezmer recordings and sheet music sources Klezmer Podcast and Radiant Others two podcasts currently inactive which interviewed klezmer performers and scholars Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Klezmer amp oldid 1144039629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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