(87 results found)

The Early Attempts at Creating a Theory of Ashkenazi Liturgical Music
… as a Dialogue of Cultures) … 33934 … 59–69 … Wiesbaden, Germany … Harrassowitz Verlag … … 2013 … Ashkenaz … Ashkenazi liturgy … Ashkenazi … Boaz Tarsi … Jascha Nemtsov … The Early Attempts at …

Hatikvah: Conceptions, Receptions and Reflections
… of the struggling surrounding non-Jewish nations, Poland, Germany as well as the Russian and Austro-Hungarian Empires. … Jewish melody, the Leoni Yigdal , see below under Ashkenazi hypothesis) with the Italian predecessors (see below … from the surrounding non-Jewish society. [29] Ashkenazi Hypothesis Also Ashkenazi melodies competed in the race …
Haint Iz Purim, Brider, Part II
… of the famous ‘Shoshanat Yaakov,’ which is sung in Ashkenazi synagogues after the evening reading of the megillah … Zionist circles, especially youth movements in Poland and Germany, adopted this wordless Hassidic niggun as a hora …

Moritz Rosenhaupt
… (today Offenbach-Hundheim, in the Rheinland-Pfalz State, Germany). His father, Jacob, was a rabbi and teacher; he … in Philadelphia and Isaak Fränkel, cantor in Grünstadt, Germany, whose daughter, Johanna, Rosenhaupt married. His … in the scholarly literature concerning the Western Ashkenazi tradition. Those closer to his time thought …
A centerpiece of the High Holydays liturgy: Shofet Kol Ha'aretz in Moroccan and Yemenite versions
… Bavaria/Frankfurt-Main 2. Venizia/Gorizia 3. Province Ashkenazi/Sephardi Ashkenazi/Sephardi Ashkenazi/Sephardi 3 Ashkenazi/Sephardi 4 Baer … documented in 1724 and 1733) found in South and West Germany, West of the Rhine river (See image no. 1) and in …
The medieval Hebrew song Kikhlot yeini and its Purim connections: New sources on its music
… be performed in Jewish communities on Purim, especially in Germany, is one of those songs. Attributed to Salomon Ibn … BBBX, CCCX, etc. The fifth stanza (opening with the word nazir [eremite], leading some sources to name the author as Shlomo nazir) may be a later acquisition for, as we have noticed, …

Heinrich Schalit and Paul Ben-Haim in Munich
… The Nazi rise to power in Germany at the beginning of 1933 brought to an abrupt halt … … Paul Ben-Haim … Composers … Jewish composers … Munich … Germany … Nazi Germany … Heinrich Schalit and Paul Ben-Haim in Munich …

The Training of Hazzanim in Nineteenth-Century Germany
… Nineteenth-century Germany witnessed a fundamental change in the process by … to a young novice eager to learn, still flourished in Germany in the opening decades of the nineteenth century. … common phenomenon shared by all branches of Jewry, Ashkenazim, Sephardim, and the 'adot hamizrah , namely the …
Niggun ‘Akedah: A Traditional Melody Concerning the Binding of Isaac
… Niggun ‘Akedah is an Ashkenazi melody firmly associated with the Binding of Isaac, … the great significance of the ‘Akedah narrative in Ashkenazi culture, as expressed through the poems that were sung … emerged during the tenth century in present day southern Germany and northern France. However, it also acquired two …
Moshe Attias
… narratives of forced cultural erasure by an aggressive Ashkenazi-dominated establishment. Mwijo’s repertoire also … Moroccan was Jewish or Muslim) invited him to perform in Germany. Mwijo adamantly refused to play in Germany because … too, the song in honor of Rabin, an icon of Ashkenazi Israeliness, is one of the most mizrahi songs Mwijo …