(613 נמצאו תוצאות)

Jewish Folk Dance Melody ‘Sher Kadril’
… 3 … Tatzlil … Tatzlil … 33984 … 50 … Haifa … … 6:3 … 1966 … Ashkenaz … Jewish music … Jewish wedding music … Klezmer … …

Zipporah’s wedding
… … 290-292 … New York … Rinehart and Company Inc. … … 1937 … Ashkenaz … Jewish wedding music … Jewish wedding customs … Ashkenazi … Leo Schwartz … Zipporah’s wedding …

From Mount Sinai to the Year 6000: a Study of the Interaction of Oral Tradition and Written Sources in the Transmission of an Ashkenazi Liturgical Chant (Akdamut)
… Tradition and Written Sources in the Transmission of an Ashkenazi Liturgical Chant (Akdamut) …

The mystical strain in Jewish liturgical music
… Drawing on evidence from the Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Yemenite traditions, and …
Golden Voices of Israel
… Hazzanut, Hazzanim, Cantors – Hazzanim, Cantors … Ashkenaz … Ashkenazi prayer … Cantorial music … Hazzanim - Cantors … …

Otzar ha–hazzanut: a Thesaurus of Cantorial Liturgy
… … High Holidays - Yamim Nora'im … Score … Scores … Ashkenaz … USA … Festivals - Shalosh Regalim … Ashkenazi … Liturgical music … Cantor … Cantorial music … Holidays … Shalosh Regalim … Eastern Ashkenazi … Adolph Katchko … Otzar ha–hazzanut: a Thesaurus …
Ehad mi Yodea - Its sources, variations, and parodies
… a manuscript addition (Hebrew and Yiddish) to a copy of the Ashkenazi haggadah printed in Prague in 1526/7 found at the … . After it was printed it became a fixed component of the Ashkenazi seder . In the first publications, the text of “E … by Jews; 2) If it is of Jewish origin, did it originated in Ashkenaz or in an Eastern Jewish tradition. Much of the …
David Aaron de Sola
… for Adon Olam that is still used in both Sephardi and Ashkenazi synagogues in the United Kingdom and elsewhere. …

Adon Olam
… used to close Shabbat and holiday services. In the Ashkenazi rite, Adon Olam is a hymn which closes the evening …

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, …