(378 results found)
Hopke (LKT)
… 491 (#255) . “Other dances performed at weddings in East European communities were:... Redl, Frailachs, Karahod, …
Beroyges-tants
… two Jewish weddings dances that were widespread in Eastern European Jewish communities, and [formed] part of the style … at these last dances, outside of sources found in [Eastern European Jewish] folk song, we have nothing about this … widespread in the region of Vilna... [and all of] Eastern Europe... I have no depiction of the ‘shemele’ dance [from …
Mekhutenim-tants
… two Jewish weddings dances that were widespread in Eastern European Jewish communities, and [formed] part of the style … at these last dances, outside of sources found in [Eastern European Jewish] folk song, we have nothing about this … widespread in the region of Vilna...[and all of] Eastern Europe...” Fridhaber 1972, pp. 31-36 . “[At the tenoim ,] …
«A Special Kind of Antisemitism»: On Russian Nationalism and Jewish Music
… new conditions in terms of both Russian politics and European antisemitism. Most of all, it is due to the fact … echoed the same ideas of Richard Wagner and other European musical antisemites. Jews had no national culture … and hence they could never be creative contributors to European art, only strangers and imitators. [14] Nor was the …
Shemele (LKT)
… two Jewish weddings dances that were widespread in Eastern European Jewish communities, and [formed] part of the style … at these last dances, outside of sources found in [Eastern European Jewish] folk song, we have nothing about this … widespread in the region of Vilna...[and all of] Eastern Europe... I have no depiction of the ‘shemele’ dance [from …
Khosid/Khosidl (LKT)
… style, in a stately 2/4 rhythm. In some regions of Eastern Europe, synonomous with freylekhs.” Alpert 1996b, p. 59 . ( …
Bulgar (LKT)
… full reference. “ Bulgar or bulgarish is a common East European Jewish music and dance form, usually in 2/4 time. … the American-Jewish repertoire, popular in parts of Eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Also known … first half of the 19th century. The bulgarish , in Eastern Europe only regionally popular, gradually became the most …
Doyne (LKT)
… currency among klezmorim throughout a wide area of Eastern Europe. Primarily intended for listening rather than … and other contemplative, free-meter genres in the East European Jewish tradition, including cantorial recitatives, … recording we have of a Jewish doina , distributed both in Europe and the United States, was made by a certain S. Kosch …
Volekh (LKT)
… as freylekhs, volekhls, shers, kozakl, polke ... Eastern European Jews were accustomed to invite each guest to an …
Karahod (LKT)
… included). “Other dances performed at weddings in East European communities were:... Redl, Frailachs, Karahod, …