(160 results found)
Patsh Tants (LKT)
… man such as Eliokum Tzunser sang a dance song like this at weddings, it is certain that it was performed during the … a style of dances that was very widespread in Jewish weddings. The scholar and musicologist Moshe … European origin, In a slow duple meter, it is part of the Jewish wedding. While dancing in a circle, the participants …
Koyletsh-tants (LKT)
… [after the khupe ], the klezmer were out in front of the wedding-house, to lead the couple in with music. One of the … II]. Gilernt 1954, p. 387 . “After the khupe, according to Jewish custom, they led the joyful couple together on a full …
Krakoviak (LKT)
… (#77), 314 (#77) . (Musical notation included). “After the wedding-feast they began to dance. The dances were varied … [Podalia, c. 1909].” Tshernovetski 1946, pp. 97-114 . “The Jewish folkmusic, as well as the Synagogical music, shows …
Quadrille (LKT)
… quadrille with him in the middle, just as at a wedding in a little Jewish town.” [Nikolayev, Kherson province, afterwards, … [New York, c. World War I].] Raboy 1920, p. 25 . “Jewish folk dance melody ‘ sher kadril ’. This melody was …
Jewish Folk Dance Melody ‘Sher Kadril’
… … 3 … 50 … Haifa … … 6:3 … 1966 … Ashkenaz … Jewish music … Jewish wedding music … Klezmer … Emil Sekulitz … Jewish Folk Dance …
Pinkas Khmelnik (Chmielnik)
… Jewry. New York. … 1 … Tel Aviv … … 1960 … Ashkenaz … Jewish culture … Jewish customs … Jewish dance … Jewish wedding … Ashkenazi … Moyshe-Leyzer Mints … Pinkas Khmelnik …
Kutner (LKT)
… year was 1895... After the ceremony, as is customary in a Jewish wedding, the newlyweds were led into a private room... …
Lancers (LKT)
… ballet only in 1857. There is no question of the ‘Old Jewish wedding customs’ of the title of Levanda’s article.” …
Marsh (LKT)
… Ukraine, 1820s-30s]. Fridkin 1925, p. 46 . “A Jewish wedding in the shtetl was a holiday... When Arish the … tunes which were usually adopted from the surrounding non-Jewish cultures. The adoption of marches by Hasidim is part …
Mazltov (LKT)
… “With what sort of piece did the musicians start a wedding ( mazltov , dobranoč )?” Beregovski 1937 [= … the definite form of this dance. It occurs frequently in Jewish dances, but as a phenomenon of an improvisational … part of the melody is from Meir Noy, as he heard it at Jewish weddings in Kolomeyke ( nign ‘mazl-tov’ )...” …