MBS with cantor Israel Shorr, the brilliant composer who left too soon

27th November 2020 – Shabbat is almost here

And we’ll listen to a cantor that is also the author of some of the most celebrated pieces of cantorial repertoire: Israel Schorr, born in 1886 at the Polish Galicia.


Hello, how are you? I hope well. Today it is the black Friday, isn’t it? Well!!! I have a super offer for you: your subscription to Music Before Shabbat, now, half price! ? Guaranteed.

I am having a super demanding week and I must say I am exhausted but when I start to delve in the thrilling Jewish music and history my strengths are renovated.

This week many people have seen the “secret” Hassidic wedding with 7 thousand guests in New York. If you haven’t seen it yet, check this. I hope the time to celebrate with massive amounts of people together will come back soon…  In the meantime, I was thinking what are the usual insights of the population about the Hassidic Jews. Our protagonist of today, Israel Shorr, was from a Hassidic family so I will dedicate a part of this MBS to the Hassidism.

? And remember, there are previous editions of MBS about wonderful hazzanim from the Golden AgePierre PinchikYossele RosenblattGershon Sirota and Moishe Oysher.
– And, as usual, find the music piece at the bottom – ?
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The cantor and composer that left too early

The life of Israel Schorr, as of many great cantors, is reasonably well documented. But Schorr is not as famous as others, because he died quite young at the very early age of 49 on April 9th 1935. This way, he was not a witness of the horror that would trap his mother land.

He was born in 1886 in Khyriv, or Chyrov, that was at that time in the Polish Galicia that was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and that now is Ukraine. But other sources say that he was born in Rymanów, two hours to the West from Khyriv, that is currently Poland.

He started singing as a boy soprano and became the official cantor in L’vov in 1904. He succeed his distant relative, the Hazzan Boruch Schorr, who was very appreciated because of his improvisations and his innovative compositions. There is some nice information about Boruch in this book, Discovering Jewish Music, by Marsha Bryan Edelman.

He served also in Brno, Kraków, Piestany and Zurich before emigrating to the USA in 1924, thanks to a visa for artist that he got with the help of Solomon Bloom. This man deserves attention too, his life is absolutely fascinating. You can start with this.

There at the USA, Schorr served in synagogues in Chicago and New York. Shorr was a composer as well as a cantor himself and one of the most famous pieces for hazzanut art, Sheyibone Beit Hamikdash, has done by him. You can find many renditions of this piece in Youtube. But my favourite is the one by the aforementioned Moishe Oysher, of whom I talked in this previous edition. Israel Shorr died at his 49 years old, because of a heart condition.

Sources for Schorr’s bio (check them to learn more):

Poland at the Google Maps Street View is always sunny. This is Rymanów nowadays (Khyriv is not streetviewed yet):
 

Hassidism in (very) brief 

Do you remember the edition about John Zorn and the piece Sippur? Find it here. In that edition I already talked about the founder of Hassidism, Baal Shem Tov, who made many sippurim, many tales, to teach in an easy and appealing way the ethics and practices of this new line of Judaism. It you are not familiar with it, this video is very nice. Maybe I am a little childish? ? The fact is that it is very nice!

The happy way of approaching the religious celebration that you can see in this wedding in New York is explained in the way Hassidism understands life and the relationship with the divinity.


Listen to Av Horachamim by Israel Schorr

Listen to the rendition by Israel Schorr of this Shabbos prayer, Av Horachamim, written in memory of the communities that were wiped out during the Crusades. This brief explaination is from this work by Rabbi Y. Friedman on the web Chareidi and there you can find also a part of the poem: “In his tremendous mercy may [our] merciful Father […] recall in mercy the holy kehillos that gave up their lives in sanctification of [His] Name […]”. The kehillos are the congregations. For the full lyrics in English, check this web page.

There is more information about the use of the poem in Shabbat, on this site of the Ortodox Union.

I found a brief historical explanation about the destruction of the Jewish communities in Germany by the Crusaders in XI century and the use of this poem on this page of the St John’s Wood and The Saatchi Synagogues:

“Its origins lie in the wake of the First Crusade. Many Jewish communities in Germany were decimated as mobs found an outlet for their religious zeal in killing Jews before making their way to the Holy Land to wrest it from the Muslims. Thousands of men, women and children lost their lives in the communities of the Rhineland. Mainz, Worms, Speyer were ravaged over the course of a few weeks as the Crusaders made their way down Europe. […] As the black plague swept across Europe during the mid-fourteenth century, annihilating nearly half the population, Jews were taken as the scapegoat and were accused of having brought about the plague and were persecuted and killed.”

Click the picture to listen to the recording:

 

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Shabbat Shalom.

Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música


And we share with you one hour of music for joy in this playlist.
To know more about our artists, click here.

May you always find the light in your path.


These is our artistic offer for live show:
Gulaza – Janusz Prusinowski Kompania Jewish Memory

From the shtetl to the films: MBS with Yossele Rosenblatt, “The Jazz Singer” and A Yiddishe Momme

October 30th, 2020. Shabbat is almost here

And our star today is Yossele Rosenblatt, cantor born in Ukraine in 1882 and settled in the USA from 1912, where he achieved great success and even participated in the film that would begin the definitive decline of silent films.  


Hello! How are you? I hope well! I have many things to share today. This edition follows the thread of the one about the Great Synagogue at Tłomackie Street (the one of 4th of September, find it here). Over there I mentioned that the singer in the animation video was Yossele Rosenblatt and that I would feature him in a future. That future is today. Learn about him and his fascinating life, here below.

And yesterday I learn about the radio show Polin, done by the renowed Polish translator settled in Madrid Elżbieta Bortkiewicz Morawska (in the picture) for Radio Sefarad, a project by the Federation of Jewish Communities of Spain. It is in Spanish. I think it can be interesting even for the not Spanish speakers because you can check the topics and translate automatically the introductions in text for each of the chapters. She dedicated one of her editions to the Great Synagogue at Tłomackie Street too!

The song we’ll listen today is “A Yiddishe Mame”. Elżbieta is not Yiddishe, but she is a mother as well as an enthusiast of Jewish culture. So I think she will feel specially moved by this recording. I hope you too.

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Yossele Rosenblatt, a story of success and commitment to one’s beliefs and values

How much money would $100,000 from 1927 be now? That is the amount of money that Rosenblatt was offered by Warner Brothers to co-star with Al Jolson in ‘The Jazz Singer’.

They wanted him to have a relevant role as and to sing in the film Kol Nidrei. It is the prayer that is sang on the eve of Yom Kippur. He felt that it was much too sacred to be used as entertainment and refused the offer.

Nevertheless, he participated in the film, with the payment for a star, even when he only appeared to sing one song. And it was in a not religious frame. The protagonist is in the dilemma of continuing his father’s steps as a chazzan or pursuing stardom in jazz. He attends Rosenblatt’s concert in Chicago. He sings a Yiddish song, not religious, Yahrtzeit Licht, acredited to himself in Jyrics.com. Rosenblatt represents the roots.

Curious about that scene of the film?

Watch it here. If you like it, check also this other recording of the same piece.

In the film, the protagonist, who is the son of a cantor, pursues a career as a jazz singer. Rosenblatt encarnates the roots, the traditions. The attendance to that concert produces many emotions in the protagonist. Could he be making a big mistake by abandoning his roots and following the path of modernity? Rosenblatt might had said yes to that question.

Was Rosenblatt’s Kol Nidrei worth of it? 

For sure it was. He was very popular at the time and Warner Brothers were wise business people. And fortunately we can now hear him singing that prayer, here. Decide yourself!

In Jews, Cinema and Public Life in Interwar Britain, Gil Toffell explains that “Yet whatever actual Jewish audiences made of the representation of the conflict of assimilation that formed the core of the film, the complexity of the drama was not foregrounded in the discourse or events promoting the title to British Jews. In the advertisements for the screening of the film at the Piccadilly Theatre the performance by Rosenblatt was advanced as a key attraction for Jewish audiences. No mention was made to the challenge to tradition by modernity, rather the promotion was positioned to appeal to identifiably conservative Jewish cultural tastes.” How was that…? Money makes the world go round? Even if not for Rosenblatt!

The multiple layers of The Jazz Singer  

The more I read about this film, the more meaningful it seems to be. Irv Saposnik made an amazing work in Jolson, The Jazz Singer, and the Jewish Mother: or How my Yiddishe Momme Became my Mammy, that I have to recommend with all my heart. Why? Because it uses the film to explain broader issues related to the creation of cultural identities. This analysis is useful for Jews and for anybody.

Saposnik explains the role of music, including the piece sang by Rosenblatt, in the film, with their symbolic use related to the roots and the modernity. He explains very nicely about the song we are listening to today. Below you’ll find more about this.

Briefly about his biography

As the star he was, it is easy to find the biography of Yossele Rosenblatt. For a long one, check this or this. For a shorter one, this. But this part will let us enjoy some wonderful pictures and to travel from our chair!

He was born in 1882 in Biela Tserkov. At that time, it seems there was a shtetl there. Nowadays is a little city, less than 90 kms to the South from Kiev. The presence of Jews is still noticeable. There is the great synagogue, used nowadays as a school, and there seem to be more buildings that have had use as synagogues. They are findable in google maps.

The great synagogue in Biela Tserkov looked like this. This picture is dated from some moment between 1895 and 1910. It is in wikipedia and is of public domain. See below its current look:

And this is nowadays, from the street view of google maps. It took me some time to accept that it is the same building. It is. You can learn more about the building, at The Bezalel Narkiss Index of Jewish Art.

 

Very brieftly: Yossele came for a long line of chazzanim. His father was a cantor in Kiev and Yossele became part of his choir. He worked as a cantor in Munkacs (part of Hungary until 1920, currently Ukraine), Pressburg (currently, Bratislava) and Hamburg, from where he tried to escape to the USA without completing his contract of 5 years. He was caught. He would arrive to the USA only in 1912. He was hired inmediately as a cantor in New York and started to record for several record companies. This increased his popularity much. He was offered to be a opera singer but he rejected in order not to abandon the Jewish way of life. He composed many pieces too.

He died in 1933 in Palestine. He was there recording for a film. There, he and his wife had decided to settled definitively over there. One Shabbat, after was recording by the Dead Sea, he had a heart-attack and died at his 51 years old. His funeral was attended by more than 5.000 people (other sources say 20.000). He was buried at the Mount of Olives and his remains continue there.

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Listen to Rossenblat’s rendition of the much popular Yiddish song A Yiddishe Mame

I will quote some paragraphs of the outstanding work by Irv Saposnik mentioned above (read it complete, here), as I wouldn’t ever transmit this deepness about the piece. The other piece mentioned, A Brivele der Mamen, “a little letter for mom”, is this. Find the lyrics of “My Yiddishe Mamma” under the video.

“A Brivele der Mamen” (1907) is only one of many Yiddish songs in which the Jewish mother was used as a reminder of the separation that emigration enforced. Its three stanzas, sung to a plaintive tune, foreshadow what was later to become commingled with nostalgia for the old home. The sadness of separation, the son’s lack of responsibility, the mother’s complaint that in eight years he hadn’t written her one letter, much of which later became comic shtick, was in 1907 no matter for laughter. The experience was too fresh, the pain too acute. Absence may make the heart grow fonder, but the head forgets too soon. […]

“My Yiddishe Mamma” is as expressive of twenties’ sentiment as “A Brivele der Mamen” had been of turn-of-the-century attitudes. Written by Jack Yellen and Lew Pollack in 1925, it became particularly identified with Sophie Tucker, especially after she recorded it in both English and Yiddish versions on two sides of a single record. Two languages for a mixed generation. Side by side, Yiddish and English establish a balance between old and new, between parents and children, between past and future. Parents and children are in transit, and the Yiddishe Momme, while no longer abandoned, is put in her place.

Or perhaps, more accurately places, for the Yiddish and English versions offer different mothers for different audiences. The English Yiddishe Momme is placed in “a humble East Side tenement,” and the singer reaches across “the trails of Time” to recollect the “three flights up in the rear … where my childhood days were spent.” Separation has set in; the singer has grown up, and grown away. The past is remembered with affection, but it remains irretrievable. The Jewish mother, like the old shtetl, lies buried in time.

“My Yiddishe Momme” in Yiddish seems to be a different song. Past and present are intermingled. While the Jewish mother has grown old along with her surroundings, she is still an active presence, still capable of nurturing the world around her. She belongs in her world, and in ours.”

 

Click the picture to listen to the recording: 

 

Ikh vil bay aykh a kashe fregen, zogt mir ver es ken
Mit velkhe tayere farmegen bentcht got alemen?
Men koyft dos nisht fir kayne gelt, dos git men nor umzist
Oon dokh az men ferlirt dos, oy vi treren men fargist
A Tzvayten git men kaynem nit, es helft nisht kayn gevayn
Oy, ver es hot farloyrn, der vays shoyn vos ikh mayn.
A Yiddishe Mame,
Es gibt nisht besser oif der velt
Oy vey vi bitter ven zi felt
Vi shayn in likhtig iz in hoiz ven di mame iz do
Vi troyerig finster vert ven Got nemt ir oif Olam Haboh
In vasser in fayer volt zi gelofn far ihr kind
nisht halten ihr tayer, dos iz gevis di gresten zind
Oy, vi gliklekh un raykh iz der mentsh vos hot
Aza shayne matuneh geshenkt foon G-t,
Nor ayn altichke Yiddishe Mame,
Oy, Mame Mayn!
I’d like to ask a question—tell me if you know.
God blesses everyone with what cherished possession?
It’s free! You can’t buy it!
And when you lose it, you’ll shed many a tear!
You’ll never get a second one—no matter how hard you cry!
If you’ve already lost it, you already know what I mean!
A Yiddish Mamma
There’s nothing better in this world!
A Yiddish Mamma
Oh! The bitterness when she’s gone!
How nice, how, bright it is at home, when Mother is there!
How sad, how dark it is, when God takes her away!
She would run through water and through fire for her child!
Not to hold and cherish her is a sin!!
How lucky, how rich is he
To have such a beautiful gift given him by God!
Like a dear old Yiddish Mamma
O Mamma mine!

 

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Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música 

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MBS before Rosh Hashanah with Keter Musaf by Rabbi Hagay Batzri

Shabbat is almost here. Rosh Hashanah is almost here

May you be inscribed in the Book of Life. Let’s begin this time of reflection with a contemporary chazzan of outstanding artistry, Rabbi Hagay Batzri


Hello! How are you? This is the first Rosh Hashanah of Music Before Shabbat and I am thrilled for sharing with you this moment, that is full of meaning. I think you can take advantage of this time to reflect, whether you are religious or not. To find yourself and to consider your contribution to the world. Have a prosperous, a sweet year. Shanah Tovah. 

As usual, you have the video at the bottom. And if you like this, as usual, please: share it with your friends! Thank you in advance.


“Music crosses all boundaries and unifies us”. The voice of Rabbi Hagay Batzri

I love the old recordings. In previous editions we have listened to Sephardic chazzanim, like İsak Maçoro (don’t miss to listen to his Avinu Malkeinu, in this previous edition) and İzak Algazi (listen him in a love song, here). It is not that easy to find currently alive singers who get close to them and that haven’t tended to a commercial sound. Even so, some are really enchanting, like David Kadosh (listen to him in this edition) and our protagonist of today: Rabbi Hagay Batzri.

According to his Facebook Page (from where I got the portrait), “Rabbi Hagay Batzri was born in Jerusalem into a family of rabbis and cantors. He is descended from the Ben Ish Chai and from Rabbi Yehuda Ftaya, and his father heads the supreme rabbinical court of Israel. In 1997 he received his rabbinical smicha from Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu, Chief Rabbi for the State of Israel.”

Who was the Ben Ish Chai? According to Chabad.org, “Chacham Yosef Chaim (1832-1909), known as the Ben Ish Chai, was a highly-revered Torah scholar and master of Kabbalah. Based in Baghdad, Iraq, he was recognized by the Sephardic community both locally and abroad as an eminent Halachic authority.”

And Rabbi Yehuda Ftaya? According to JewishIdeas.org, Hakham Yehudah Moshe Yeshua Fetaya (in the picture, from Wikipedia, was born in Baghdad in 1860 and was disciple of the Ben Ish Chai.

What is chacham? According to Jewish-Languajes.org, khokhem, chocham, chochem, hacham, haham, chuchum, chochem, means wise, genious and for Sephardic, it is the same as rabbi.

“Rabbi Batzri enjoys teaching what he calls practical kabbalah, the kabbalistic reasons and explanations behind Jewish laws, concepts, and practices. He balances his study of Jewish mysticism and his rabbinical duties with concert performances in the United States, Israel, and other countries. […] He has performed, among other venues, at UCLA with the world-renowned Yuval Ron Ensemble. His musical philosophy is simple and beautiful: “Music crosses all boundaries and unifies us.” For Rabbi Batzri, creating music is a way of expressing gratitude and appreciation for all we have. When we make music, we embrace life and all living creatures.”
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Keter Musaf by Rabbi Hagay Batzri

What is Keter Musaf? Keter means crown and has a special meaning in Kabbalah. You can learn more, here. Musaf is an additional offering or prayer, for holy days like Shabbat, Shavuot, Pessach or Rosh Hashanah. It is an aditional religious service for those days, added to the usual Amidah. Musaf would be a fourth Amidah (the usual days they are three Amidah).

Keter is part of the Kedushah. Kedushah means holiness and it is the sanctification of God’s name during the Amidah prayer. What is Amidah? According to MyJewishLearning, “the Amidah is the core of every Jewish worship service, and is therefore also referred to as HaTefillah, or “The prayer.” Amidah, which literally means, “standing,” refers to a series of blessings recited while standing.” The part of Keter in the Musaf prayer recited on Shabbat is sang only by Sepharadim, not by Askhenazim.

According to DailyHalacha.com, “The recitation of “Keter” at Musaf thus marks a very significant and sacred moment, when we join together with the heavenly angels for the purpose of declaring Hashem’s sanctity.”

About Musaf, there is much more information in the JewishEncyclopedia.

Click the picture to listen to the recording:
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I hope you’ll like it and, if so, feel free to share it and invite your friends to join us.
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May you be inscribed in the book of life.

Shanah Tovah

Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música 

To know more about our artists, click here.

MBS with the sanctum sanctorum of hazzanuz and the Jewish Caruso

4th September 2020 – Shabbat is almost here

And Warsaw and its History of hazzanut at the Great Synagogue will guide us to a vanished time, through the voice of Gershon Yitzchok Sirota


Hello! How are you? Yes, I am a bit delayed today!!! But this is still before Shabbat! I have had very busy days and here I am again.

In this occasion, we follow the thread of Thomas La-Rue, the black cantor’s story, who performed in Warsaw at a time where the Great Synagogue at Tłomackie Street was the landmark of hazzanut. La-Rue didn’t perform there, but many other cantors did, like our protagonist of today, Gershon Sirota, whose life is connected, for better and for worse, with the city.

I won’t hide that I have a special love for Poland, that country in which, according to my dear Janusz Prusinowski, there is still the feeling of something that is lacking: it is the presence of Jews. He also considers that “Polish and Jewish cultures have quite much in common, so I can understand better Polish culture thank to Jewish music/culture knowledge.” Read more about these reflexions by Janusz, here.

I invite you to listen to a recording that takes us back in time to the Wielka Synagoga w Warszawie, with the voice of the hazzan who was its Obercantor from 1907 until 1926.

As usual, you have the video at the bottom. And if you like this, as usual, please: share it with your friends! Thank you in advance.
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The Great Synagogue in Warsaw

There isn’t any synagogue now in Tłomackie Street. According to Sztetl.org.pl “On 16 May 1943, explosives were set up around the site and the synagogue was blown up personally by General Stroop to mark the end of his mission to exterminate all Warsaw Jews”.

Nevertheless, f*** you, Stroop: the synagogue dissapeared but the headquarters of the Main Judaic Library and of the Institute for Judaic Studies, that are here in the picture on the left, are now the Jewish Historical Institute and the Jews were not erased from Polish land. This picture is from its website:

This is how it looks like today in Google Maps:
The cornerstone of the Great Synagogue was laid in a ceremony held on 14 May 1876. The architect was Leandro Marconi, who also built the Synagogue Nożyków, the only one that survived the World War II (more info, at the website of Jewish.org.pl). The grand opening and consecration of the synagogue took place on the day of Rosh Hashanah of the year 5639 (on 26 September 1878). Find much more information about the building and its history and the use by the community in Sztetl, a website by POLIN Museum

Let’s visit the Great Synagogue

Arik Boas Animation made a few years ago this animation you have below, for The Museum of the Jewish People (Beit Hatfutsot).

Pay attention to the face of the chazzan! Doesn’t he look like Gershon Yitzchok Sirota? In fact he does, but note that the singer in this animation is accredited to be another superb cantor, also born in Ukraine, but about whom I haven’t found references of his presence in Warsaw at the Great Synagogue: Yossele Rosenblatt, who will be our star in a future MBS –>

Anyway, immerse yourself in the Great Synagogue! 


The great chazzan at the most prestigious position in the cantorial world

Gershon Sirota became the Obercantor in the Great Synagogue in 1907. The World War II brought the end of the Synagogue and also of Sirota.

According to Rabbi Geoffrey Shisler, “Not without good reason was Gershon Sirota spoken of as the ‘Jewish Caruso.’ Even with the poor quality recordings that we have of him today, it’s quite clear that he had a most extraordinary voice and since he was a contemporary of Caruso (1873 – 1938), the comparison was bound to be made. An apocryphal story has it that Caruso would come to hear Sirota sing or conduct a service whenever they were in the same town at the same time.

Gershon was born in Podolia in 1874. His father was a cantor in the local synagogue and, already as a child, Gershon helped his father in the services. The family moved to Odessa, where he would be cantor in Shalashner Shul. Later he gave service at the Shtat Synagogue of Vilna. His performances granted him more and more popularity and was called to make special concerts in many cities around, first in Russia and Poland, and later much further. He was the first cantor to record his voice on phonograph records and he became world famous thanks to this. 

Between 1912 and 1927 he toured in many ocassions at the USA. It made him lose his position in the Great Synagogue, because he was absent too much time, specially in the High Holy Days. No problem. He was already a very demanded star.

He toured at the USA for his last time in 1938. It is sad that he didn’t decide to stay there. He had to return to Warsaw because his wife was very ill. The start of the war found him there. The family was imprisoned in the Guetto, where he would conduct the High Holy Day services in 1941.

In the first months of 1943, a strong resistence arised in the Guetto of Warsaw and an uprising started on April 19. The bombing of our Synagogue, that was out of the Guetto, was the symbol of the end of that uprising. Sirota was murdered with his family in the last day of Pessah, during the destruction of the Guetto.

The sources for this brief bio have been: Jewish Music Research CenterMusic and the Holocaust.


The voice of the “Jewish Caruso”

I have chosen his rendition of Avinu Maikenu. Check also the version of İsak Maçoro in this previous edition of Music Before Shabbat.
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Click the picture to listen to the recording:

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I hope you’ll like it and, if so, feel free to share it and invite your friends to join us.
It is as symple as sending … this link to sign up

Shabbat Shalom.

Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música


And we share with you one hour of music for joy in this playlist.
To know more about our artists, click here.

May you always find the light in your path.


These is our artistic offer for live show:
Gulaza – Janusz Prusinowski Kompania Jewish Memory

MBS with the black cantor Thomas La-Rue, through Henry Sapoznik

21th August 2020 – Shabbat is almost here

And today we travel with our imagination to the USA of one century ago with Henry Sapoznik to answer this question: How does a non-Jewish African-American boy born at the beginning of the 20th century end up making a living singing liturgical music in Yiddish?


Hello, how are you? I hope well. This week I have had two reasons to celebrate:

  • my birthday, that is on August 26th
  • and to discover the amazing blog by Henry Sapoznik and his series of posts about the black cantors in the 1920s and 1930s at the USA.
I invite you to listen to a recording that tells us so many things! It wouldn’t be available without Henry’s work.
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As usual, you have the video at the bottom. And if you like this, as usual, please: share it with your friends! Thank you in advance.
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Who is Henry Sapoznik

I have the feeling that at the USA, any person interested in Jewish culture knows Henry. Despite the globalization, there is still a big gap between North America and Europe in the field of not mainstream culture, so let me introduce him.

I took this picture from his Facebook profile. It is meaningful: he is a Jew who plays banjo. But he is much more. According with his website, he is a native Yiddish speaker and child of Holocaust survivors, award-winning producer, musicologist and performer, and writer in the fields of traditional and popular Yiddish and American music and culture.

He explained to me that he started his blog as an answer to the situation produced by the pandemic. We are experiencing much suffering because of it but at least some little jewels are being born in this dramatic conditions. He also told me that he has the idea of starting a podcast. I will be checking to update you.

Sapoznik was the founding director of the sound archives of the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in New York from 1982 to 1995, as well as founder and director of KlezKamp, beginning in 1985 for the next 30 years.

Henry’s parents were both from Rovno, between Lvov and Kiev. It is the region of Volhynia, also known as Volinskaya, Wolin, Wolyn, Wolina, Wolinsk, Volinski, Wolinski, Volenskii, Wolenskj, Wolenskja, Volin and Volyn, according to the JewishGen website. It is a land that has changed from the hands of Poland, Ukraine and Soviets. Nowadays it is part of Ukraine. Apart from the extermination of the Jews of Volhynia, that began in the first days after the outbreak of the war between Germany and the Soviet Union, according to the Jewish Virtual Library, in 1943–44 the region was the scene of ethnic massacres in which some 100,000 Poles died and some 20,000 Ukrainians were killed in revenge. The Polish film of 2016 Wołyń, in which my colaborator Janusz Prusinowski played, shows this situation.

According to JGuideEuropeon 6 November 1941, the 17500 inhabitants of Rovno’s ghetto were executed in a single day and left to rot in a huge, circular mass grave. The Sosonki memorial, on the road to Kiev, around two miles from Rovno, reminds this massacre.

Rovno has a synagogue very near the former (and bigger and newer) synagogue and Google Maps is very nice to show them to us:

You know this Music Before Shabbat uses music for the joy in itself and as the thead to learn more about history and I feel this very close to Henry’s vision. I can’t hide what a big joy it has been for me to meet this man and talk with him at the Facebook.


Toyve Ha’Cohen or the black cantor Thomas La-Rue

This amazing story is widely told by Henry in his blog in this post about Larue, and in this one about the tour he made in 1930. I strongly recommend you to check those links. Here I will just make a brief summary of Henry’s work. This poster is from his website too. 

Thomas was born in 1902, son of a single mother. They lived in Newark (New Yersey) and she faced much racism. She could make friends only in the Jewish women. With the time, she started to become into their religious believings. Her son and her daughter received a traditional Jewish primary school education. It is not clear if she converted. 

How did he start to become a professional singer in Yiddish?

According to Henry’s blog: «One anecdote about LaRue which was repeated so often it has the burnished patina of a creation myth, concerns a Sabbath service he attended as a young boy. During the service, the cantor was taken ill so LaRue quickly put on a prayer shawl and, before the congregation could orient itself, took to the lectern and in his soprano voice began to intone the prayers. The congregation was ready to storm the podium to take him down but he sang with such great feeling that they remained standing and began praying.» True or false, who knows. Thomas was hired by a manager and his career started in 1921 and soon he became usual at the stage in shows of Yiddish theatre. And the recording below is from June 1923.

In 1930 he made a tour in Egypt, Palestine, Israel, Germany and Poland. He was welcome in Warsaw with big scepticism. It was at the time the landmark for cantorial art, specially by the role of the Great Tłomackie synagogue, that will be our focus in a future edition of MBS. This wonderful picture below is from the website of the Jewish Historical Institute.

For that tour, the productor, Edvin Relkin, invented a totally fake story in which his mother died when he was young and his father was a high official in the local Abyssinian government, they were descendents of the Ten Lost Tribes.

Thomas’ last performance documented is in 1953 in Newark. It is not known his date of death nor where is he buried.

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The song encouraging the Polish Jews to keep the hope

From the available recordings by Thomas La-Rue in Henry’s Youtube channel, I have chossen the one that I prefer the least in terms of melody but that has very meaningful lyrics, specially taking into consideration the story of Henry’s parents. The whole lyrics are in this post by Henry and I will just copy a little part. You’ll understand what I mean:
.

Don’t give up hope yet, Mr. Jew
One day it will all work out for you
Pharaoh, Haman and Amolek taught a bitter lesson
But those days are through
Czar Nikolai, has met his destiny
And from Poland, you’ll be free

.

Click the picture to listen to the recording of Thomas La-Rue:

I hope you’ll like it and, if so, feel free to share it and invite your friends to join us.
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Shabbat Shalom.

Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música


And we share with you one hour of music for joy in this playlist.
To know more about our artists, click here.

May you always find the light in your path.


These is our artistic offer for live show:
Jako el Muzikante – Gulaza – Janusz Prusinowski Kompania Jewish Memory

The secret of Shabbat in Aramaic, by cantor Pierre Pinchik

17th July 2020 – Shabbat is almost here

And our protagonist today sings to the secret of Shabbat, in Aramaic. He was born in Ukranian land at the time of the Russian Empire and became the favourite chazan in Chicago: he is Pierre Pinchik

Hello, how are you? I have goosebumps. It is almost impossible for me to write while listening to this recording. Some specific performances has such a power that makes you think “what did this man have inside to sing like that?“. Many cantors has sang Rozo D’Shabbos wonderfully. Pinchik develops unexpected melistama, plays with the phrasing accelerating and slowing down, chews some syllables and uses a soul-stirring vibrato, in this text in Aramaic, for which he created the music. 

As usual, you have the video at the bottom. And if you like this, don’t be selfish: share it with your friends!

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A voice from the Golden Age of the Chazanim

Pierre Pinchik was born as Pinchas Segal in 1900 in the Ukranian village of Zhivitov, that was part of Russian Empire at that time. I think it must be now Zhyvotivka, in the oblast of Kiev, Ukraine.

So he grew up in the Czarist Russia, attending the Hassidic Skverer yeshiva, lead by a rabbi that was very fond of music and used to invite cantors. Later, Pinchas changed the yeshiva for the conservatory in Kiev, where he would study piano and voice.

And, after the revolution, he was hired by the new Red Army for touring the country singing folk songs. He served as chazan in Leningrad for 6 years, before moving to the USA in 1927. During that period, he realiced that the classic liturgyc repertoire from the XIX century was not the most suitable for his voice and style, so he rearranged some and also composed some new ones, like this Rozo D’Shabbos.

At the USA his career boosted almost inmediately, he became much appreciated as a cantor and he recorded several albums, signed by the RCA. His main synagogue was K’nesset Israel Nusaḥ S’fard in Chicago. He died in 1971 and is buried in Boston.

I found this portrait and some biographic facts at the website of Geoffrey Shisler and also in Milken Archive. In this last one there are further details of how he got to travel to the USA with documents provided by the poet Itzik Fefer, who would be murdered later in Stalin’s massacre of Jewish poets, also about the first years there, as well as about the Chemelnitzki massacre in XVII century at the birthland of Pinchas.

The song about the secret of Shabbat

The lyrics of the song are in Aramaic, from the Sephardic liturgy of Shabbat. You can find them and the translation into English, here at the blog A Nigun A Day.

You can get the general sense but I think you must be familiar with the Hassidic kabbala to really understand the meaning in all its deepness. If you are, and if you know also Hebrew alphabet, this seems a very interesting explanation at the website of the project It Is Shabbos, by the contemporary cantor Yaakov Lemmer, who has also recorded this song. You can listen him singing it live, here.

Clic the picture to listen to Rozo D’Shabbos by Pierre Pinchik:

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I hope you’ll like it and, if so, feel free to share it and invite your friends to join us.
It is as symple as sending … this link to sign up

Shabbat Shalom.

Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música


And we share with you one hour of music for joy in this playlist.
To know more about our artists, click here.

May you always find the light in your path.


These is our artistic offer for live show:
Jako el Muzikante – Gulaza – Janusz Prusinowski Kompania Jewish Memory

MBS with a super star of the Yiddish films from the 30s

19th June 2020 – Shabbat is almost here

And in this occasion we will enjoy the voice of one of the best singers of the History: Moishe Oysher, spellbinding both in popular music and in liturgical singing.

I hope you are well! I learnt about this artist when I started to search for cantors and I come back to listen him again and again: he is Moishe Oysher. 

While searching for facts about his bio, I realiced that I consider Moishe Oysher as a star but that his niece Marilyn Michaels may be even more famous. The Oyshers came from a family of at least six generations of cantors. Apart of Moishe and his niece Marilyn, his syster Fraydele, Marilyn’s mother, was also a recognized singer. You can listen the ladies here

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Poignant cantor, Yiddish cinema star and ‘Kosher heart throb’

Moustache is often a good idea. With this outfit, that defiant gaze and that outstandingly passionated way of singing, I can understand why Moishe became popular.

 

· At the bottom you’ll find the video with his voice ·
This picture is from the film Der Zingendiker Shmid (The Singing Blacksmith), directed by Edgar G. Ulmer, based on the play Yankl der Shmid, by David Pinski. Find here a very interesting documentary about the film.

Moishe was born in Lipcani in 1907, that nowadays is in Moldava. But at the time of his birth, Lipcani was part of Khotin district of Bessarabia guberniya of Russian Empire. With the birth of the state of Moldava, the river Prut that bathes the city would be the natural border with Romania. The border with Ukraine would be also very near, few kilometres to the North.

Today, Google Maps shows in Lipcani the place of the church of the Seventh-day Adventists and also of the Jehova Witnesses. The pressence of Jewish is kept thanks to the thrilling project of repair and documentation of the Jewish cemetery, started in 2013. Before the II World War, many of the inhabitants of the city were Jews. In 1941, they were deported to Brichany and Transnistria. Clic the picture if you are interested in a documentary about Lipcani with testimonies of survivors. In 1952, the Lipcani quarter would be buildt in the city of Ramat Gan, at the East of Tel Aviv.

But the young Moishe wouldn’t have to experience the terror. His destiny was another. From a very young age, he was captivated by the magic of the stage and started acting in theatre as soon as possible. In 1921, a 15 years old Moishe travelled to Canada to join his father, who emigrated to America when he was a kid. He was left in Lipcani, where he would get the spell of the music from both of his grandfathers.

Once in Canada, he joined the Actors’ Union in 1924 and started to work. The following years, he would move to USA, he would marry Florence Weiss, who would be co-starring some films with him (watch them singing together, here), he travelled to Latin America with his own company and, after his return in 1932, all the shows at the theatres had already done the castings. He was finding no job… but the time of the High Holidays was coming: he was luckily hired as chazan for the High Holidays at the First Roumanian-American congregation. His style keeping the prayers of Bessarabia, would enchant the public, as he does nowadays.


And what about the song?

There are many recordings by Moishe Oysher available. I selected this one of a cantorial melody that talks about the reconstruction of the Temple. It was composed by another chazan, Israel Schorr, born in 1886 in the Polish Galitzia, about who I will talk longer in a future MBS issue.

Oysher’s rendition of Sheyibaneh Bet Hamikdash is a 6 minutes joy of dynamic development in which his voice and creativity scale the greatest heights of artistry. Enjoy.


Clic the picture to listen Sheyibone Beit Hamikdash by Moishe Oysher:

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I hope you’ll like it and, if so, feel free to share it and invite your friends to join us.
It is as symple as sending … this link to sign up

Shabbat Shalom.

Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música


And we share with you one hour of music for joy in this playlist.
To know more about our artists, click here.

May you always find the light in your path.


These is our artistic offer for live show:
Jako el Muzikante – Gulaza – Janusz Prusinowski Kompania Jewish Memory

MBS with a piyyut sang by Yemenites in 1957 in Israel, recorded by a Bengali ethnomusicologist: Deben Battacharya

12 June 2020 – Shabbat is almost here

And in this occasion we will enjoy a mesmerizing old recording of a Yedid Nafshi, dating from 1957, from the recordings made in Israel by the Bengali ethnomusicologist Deben Battacharya.

I hope you are well! I want to ask you something. If you like this, please share it with your friends. It is all I could want with this, to reach more people with these musics that captures the History of our civilization. Under the video you have a button to sign up.

In the last edition we payed attention to a contemporary artist, David Krakauer, and we talked about current events. But I can’t hide my addiction to the old music. That’s why I feel so thankful to people like Deben Battacharya. In 1957, he spent 2 months in Israel, recording the different people that gathered there from so many origins. In Yish’i, between Jerusalem and Ashdod, he meet the Yemenite community.

The recordings by Deben Battacharya in Israel 1957

This portrait of Deben is from the booklet of a collection of 4 albums with those recordings, that was released by Westminster in 1959 under the name of “In Israel Today“. This recording of Yedid Nafshi is also included in a much newer and easier to find compilation, released in 2014 by ARC Music (whose work of re-editing and disseminating Battacharya’s work is also outstanding), under the name of Music of the Oriental Jews from North Africa, Yemen & Bukhara. You can find more info about this compilation, here. It contains more outstanding beauties so I might come back to this album in the future.

In website The World Jukebox, you can also find information about the different albums released with those recordings as well as a brief information about Deben and his trip to Israel. And if you want to know more about Deben Battacharya, there is a large interview made by his friend Kevin Daly, here.

The recording of Yedid Nafshi is accredited to Nissim Matari (even though you’ll hear two different singers) of whom there are no references apart of this recording. But the booklet of the edition of 1959 explains that Yish’i “was founded in 1950 to house some of the Yemenites who had arrived to Israel during one of the largests airlifts in the world, known in Israel as “magic carpet”“. Deben met the settlers at the end of their day’s work. Then they moved to the village hall, where all the inhabitants, of all ages, men and women, gathered. Deben would edit 6 pieces in the collection of 4 albums, with the recordings of that evening. Let’s enjoy the result.

Clic the picture to listen Yedid Nafshi by Nissim Matari:

I hope you’ll like it and, if so, feel free to share it and invite your friends to join us.
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Shabbat Shalom.

Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música


And we share with you one hour of music for joy in this playlist.
To know more about our artists, click here.

May you always find the light in your path.


These is our artistic offer for live show:
Jako el Muzikante – Gulaza – Janusz Prusinowski Kompania Jewish Memory

Music Before… Shavuot! ? With nouba Raml Maya

28 May 2020 – Shavuot is almost here

Yes! This week this message reaches you one day before because Shavuot begins tonight. Let’s start to create the atmosphere for this time for study and reflection with a piyyut sang on nouba Raml Maya.

In this occasion I have to thank once more the team of Darké Abotenou as the piece that accompanies us today is from their Youtube channel.

Once again the Sephardic legacy has the lead role in this diggest. Not the Eastern one, but the North African, with a piyyut sang on the nouba or makam?Raml Maya.

What is a makam? Very basically, in the Arabic, Persian, Turkish… music a makam is a scale, like a guide for performance, that defines a mood.
And what is a nouba? A nouba is a collection of chained pieces, like a suit with different parts and those parts are called mîzân.

The concept of nouba (also written as nawba) is deeply related to the Andalusi classical music and to Ziryab, musician in the court of Abd al-Rahman II in Cordoba in the IX century. He came from Persia and he put the seeds for this music to develope during the following centuries. The noubas developed in the North of Africa and nowadays there are kept eleven noubas in Morocco and sixteen in Algeria. In the web site Hazanout.com, dedicated to the hazanout in Morocco, they are mentioned 16 and the terms of makam and nouba are both used without further clarification.

? Special announcement: later today, 28th of May at 17h (Central European Time), Yan Delgado and me will make an interview with Jako el Muzikante, who will talk in Ladino and I will translate into English. Check here in advance ?

Where does my turmoil comes from? Let me explain. 

The Raml Maya is a nouba of which you can find many renditions of its parts (note that a complete nouba with all its parts can last six or seven hours) by artists of Andalusian music, like this or this. This recording that we will listen today is named Makam Raml Maya and you can listen at the beginning of the recording how Shavuot is mentioned and the piece is announced as “makam”. So my inference is that in the last years the terms of makam and nouba are been used indistinctly at least in the context of the sang piyyutim. Any further clarification about this would be really appreciated! In the meantime, let’s continue with what is clear like water: Shavout starts tonight and we have this beautiful piyyut (the lyrics are from the Machzor) to listen to warm up. 

Clic the picture to enjoy the piyyut for Shavuot:

I hope you’ll like it and, if so, feel free to share it and invite your friends to join us.
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Shavuot sameach

Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música


And we share with you one hour of music for joy in this playlist.
To know more about our artists, click here.

May you always find the light in your path.


These is our artistic offer for live show:
Jako el Muzikante – Gulaza – Janusz Prusinowski Kompania Jewish Memory

Music Before Shabbat, with Izak Algazi Efendi. A declaration of crippling love ?

15 May 2020 – Shabbat is almost here

Enjoy with Izak Algazi, born in Izmir in 1889. Let’s listen his “Reina de la Grasia”, queen of the grace, a recording from 1929, that is a declaration of a crippling love.


I first learned about Izak Algazi from Jako el Muzikante, who told me about this hazzan after a conversation about Izak Maçoro, who was our star some MBSs ago

So, after three editions with klezmer, I return to the Sephardic heritage and to some old music. Izak Algazi was mentioned quite recently in Ladinokomunita, a fascinating email group with participants discussing in Ladino, some natives of the languaje and other people that have learnt it, many of them quite devoted to the continuity of the languaje. They mentioned the presence of a street called Algazi in Izmir, name in his honour.

Izak Algazi was very recognized for his artistry during his life. He was the son of another well-known hazzan from Izmir, Salomon Algazi. Izak had a brilliant career in Turkey, he made many recordings for several record companies and even Mustafa Kemal, before becoming Atatürk, gave him an autographed Quran as a present.

Algazi left Turkey in 1933, as the chances for a Jewish to develope any position in public life started to dissapear in the process of turkification. He settled in Paris for 2 years to complete his rabbinical studies and moved to Montevideo in 1935, because he was invited to join the Sephardic Synagogue. Professor Edwin Seroussi, who knows his biography from at first-hand, has helped me to understand a bit better the situation that caused these events, so I thank him very much.

You can find a list of his recordings on SephardicMusic.org, website, where it is mentioned that he recorded this song in 3 occasions: 1909, 1912 and 1929. Below you can hear the last one. In this same link you can read a brief bio.

And what about the song of crippling love?

By the way, I have to thank Joshua Cheek for helping with the term of “crippling” and  some more tips of the English languaje. And I said it is a song of crippling love, because of the lyrics. And it is curious because Izak Algazi’s wife’s name was Reina!!! And reina means queen. The questions is that the lyrics say:

Reina de la grasia
Madre de la bivez
Onde ke te tope
Por verte otra vez.
Vo murir, vo murir
Si tu mas non te vez
Queen of the grace
Mother of the life
Where could I found you
to see you once more.

I’m going to die, I’m going to die
if I don’t see you again

I wonder if Reina made him a lot of “love sorrows” before getting married and having their three kids. Anyway, with sorrows or not, let’s enjoy the amazing voice and the almost unbelievable melismata of Izak Algazi:

Clic the picture to enjoy Reina de la Grasia,
by Izak Algazi:

I hope you’ll like it and, if so, feel free to share it and invite your friends to join us.
It is as symple as sending … this link to sign up

Shabbat Shalom.

Araceli Tzigane | Mapamundi Música


And we share with you one hour of music for joy in this playlist.
To know more about our artists, click here.

May you always find the light in your path.


These is our artistic offer for live show:
Jako el Muzikante – Gulaza – Janusz Prusinowski Kompania Jewish Memory