(586 results found)
Ma'oz Tzur
… sung version of this hymn comes from the Western European Ashkenazi tradition dating back to the 15th century. …
Shofet Kol Ha'aretz
… Hashanah of Sephardic origins that is also sung in various Ashkenazi communities during the High Holy Days. As the High … we dedicate the song of the month to rare recordings of Ashkenazi melodies for this piyyut. The author’s first name … (stanzas of few rhyming lines with a refrain). In the Ashkenazi order of prayers it appears as an epilogue (or, in …
Prayer for the state
… regarding its musical performance. Since the Eastern Ashkenazi cantorial tradition was the one adopted as the … the new prayer on the basis of a sui generis combination of Ashkenazi musical patterns that has no precise parallel in …
Dos Fartribene Taybele (The Exiled Dove)
… … New York … Yiddish … Yiddish songs … Yiddish Theater … Ashkenazi … Dos Fartribene Taybele (The Exiled Dove) …
Hanukah Blessings
… regardless of the ethnic background (Sephardic or Ashkenazi) of its members or their religious leanings. … It opens with an instrumental version of the common Ashkenazi tune for the piyyut (sacred song) Maoz Tzur, … stylized and rhythmicized version of the traditional Ashkenazi blessings. Between the melodies the choir sings …
Shofet Kol Ha'aretz
… to this day through performance, its presence in the Ashkenazi rite is obscured due to the general abandonment of … ha’aretz is a Sephardic poem that found its way into the Ashkenazi rite. As the High Holy Days season arrives, we … the Song of the Month to some rare recordings of the Ashkenazi melodies for this piyyut that were published by …
Ki Hinneh Kahomer
… Selichot prayers which are said on Yom Kippur eve in the Ashkenazi nusach. The poet uses a metaphor comparing the …
In Ale Gasn\ Hey Hey Daloy Politsey
… … Ethnomusicology … Folk songs … Politics … Yiddish songs … Ashkenazi … In Ale Gasn\ Hey Hey Daloy Politsey …
Responsorial Singing
… of the ḥ azzan , it remained significant feature of Western Ashkenazic ( minhag ashkenaz ) synagogue song. The following were recited …
The Tedeschian Community
… [1] The Tedeschian Jews are Ashkenazi Jews who originated in Germany, and immigrated to … The name 'Tedeschi' (Tedescho in singular), which means 'Ashkenazi' or 'German,' was coined by the local Italian Jews … and culture. One example is the alteration of their Ashkenazi surnames, which had a German sound and meaning, …