(1554 results found)
Zipporah’s wedding
… New York … Rinehart and Company Inc. … … 1937 … Ashkenaz … Jewish wedding music … Jewish wedding customs … Ashkenazi … Leo Schwartz … …
Eine Jüdische Hochzeit in Südrussland
… in Joel Rubin. 1997. Liner notes. pp. 17-24 in Joel Rubin Jewish Music Ensemble. Beregovski’s khasene. Welt Musik SM … … 3 … 59-93 … Berlin … … 1:1 … 1905 … Ashkenaz … Jewish wedding customs … Jewish wedding music … Ashkenazi … S. Weissenberg … Eine …
Ehad mi Yodea - Its sources, variations, and parodies
… the music within different historical contexts and local Jewish traditions. “E h ad mi yodea” is a cumulative song. … – God; two – the two tablets of the covenant; three – the Jewish patriarchs; four – the Jewish matriarchs; five – the five books of Moses; six – the …
Tvile
… ancient tribes of Israel but in certain times also among Jewish Poland, Lithuania, and Ukraine... ‘The klezmorim …
Jüdische Volksmusik: Eine mitteleuropäische Geistesgeschichte
… by scholars and folklorists, mostly of introductions to Jewish folk song collections, arranged by topics and … of the development of the modern conceptualization of Jewish folksongs in Central European learned circles of musicians and Jewish studies scholars. … 2 … Vienna … Böhlau … … 2005 … …
Vals (LKT)
… waltz meter, usually joyful. Waltzes were adopted from non-Jewish cultures by the Hasidic dynasties in Poland and … year was 1895... After the ceremony, as is customary in a Jewish wedding, the newlyweds were led into a private … in the modern era. The dance-song was preserved by the Jewish masses a long time after the social dances had …
The Jerusalem-Sephardic Tradition
… known as “Jerusalem-Sephardic,” which originated among the Jewish communities scattered throughout the Ottoman Empire … singing tradition found among the descendants of the Jewish communities exiled from Spain to the lands of Islam … singing of piyyutim is found in all of the the Sephardic Jewish tradition such as prayers, the singing of baqqashot …
Zemerl (LKT)
… a circumcision, at Hasidic gatherings, as dinner music at Jewish weddings, and at non-Jewish occasions where Jewish tunes were often requested.” Alpert 1993, p. 4 . ( …
And Now We're All Brothers: Singing In Yiddish In Contemporary North America
… most particularly the Holocaust and the construction of Jewish identities through musical performances. … 1 … …
Rabbi Shlomo Carlibach's music in it's cultural context: 1950-2005
… in the field of religious music to emerge from the American Jewish scene in the 1960s with worldwide repercussions on Jewish liturgical practices since then. … 17 … Ph.D. diss, …