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In observance of Shavuot, Jewish Ideas Daily will not publish on May 28.

Jonah and the Music of Yom Kippur

 

Leviticus 10 tells us that Aaron's sons Nadav and Avihu died for bringing "strange fire" before the Lord in the wilderness. As a result of their deaths, according to Leviticus 16, God instructed Moses to ordain an annual Day of Atonement.

My Favorite Book in the Bible  Harold BloomNew York Review of Books.  Jonah is a sly masterpiece, a parody of prophetic solemnities, a magnificent piece of literature because it is so funny.  SAVE

The Bible Scholar Who Didn’t Know Hebrew  Anthony GraftonJewish Review of Books.  Elias Bickerman may not have heard all the harmonies in Jonah, but he heard much else.  SAVE

Kol Nidrei Quartet  John ZornMilken Archive of Jewish Music.  Neither a setting nor an arrangement, John Zorn's clever and imaginative composition evokes Yom Kippur's mood of awe and introspection. (Audio)  SAVE

Chromatic Vows  Arnold SchoenbergMilken Archive of Jewish MusicArnold Schoenberg's Kol Nidrei takes a drastic departure from tradition. (Audio)  SAVE

SAVE "Jonah and the Music of Yom Kippur"

John Lennon and the Jews

 

"It's not cool to be Jewish, or Negro, or Italian. It's just cool to be alive, to be around." So said Aretha Franklin. I know, because my father used to have the soul diva's wisdom hanging on the wall of his study at home. He also used to walk around in a t-shirt with "Miscegenate" emblazoned across the chest.

Imagine  Ze'ev MaghenAzure.  "My sister or brother, spiritual daughter or son of Sarah and Abraham, you are blessed with the opportunity to connect with and benefit from a sprawling, boundless, spatial and temporal network, suffused with the deepest secrets of the ages, humming with the love of countless generations, a love that was always channeled directly and unhesitatingly at you." (PDF, 1999)  SAVE

SAVE "John Lennon and the Jews"

Radio Israel

 

Radio in Israel is as ubiquitous as hummus, falafel, and politics. During their morning and evening commutes, motorists as well as bus passengers (captive to the listening tastes of their drivers) are likely to be hearing either one of seven Israel Broadcasting Authority (IBA) affiliated stations or one of two Army Radio outlets.

Hear O Israel  Michael HandelzaltsHaaretz.  How the soldiers' station broadened its appeal to a wider audience.  SAVE

Save Army Radio!  Amit SegalHaaretz.  GALATZ needs to better reflect the Israeli consensus.  SAVE

Broadcasting Views  Yisrael Medad, Eli PollakAriel Center for Policy Research.  For good reason, Israel's media has never been accused of adhering to a right-wing bias. (PDF; 1998)  SAVE

SAVE "Radio Israel"

Poster for a musical based on the life of Anne Frank.

Holocaust without End

 

Sixty-six years after the end of World War II, the Holocaust remains one of the central puzzles of human history. For Jews, the imperative is clear: to remember and to encourage others to remember. But remember what? Has the earnest dedication of both Jews and non-Jews to seek the meaning of the event and absorb its lessons ended by emptying it of meaning and lessons alike?

The Holocaust Homily  Edward RothsteinNew York Times.  Telling the Holocaust story through elaborate generalizations has helped justify its inclusion in school curricula, but the history that emerges is stripped of all necessary distinctions.  SAVE

Making a Mockery of Memory  Giulio MeottiYnet.  While vigil is kept for Jews murdered in the Holocaust, the world becomes ever more indifferent to genocidal violence against living Jews.  SAVE

SAVE "Holocaust without End"

Mimouna!

 

What did two million Israelis do when Passover ended this year? As in previous years, they celebrated Mimouna, a Moroccan Jewish holiday that is popularly observed by picnicking, barbecueing, and consuming moufletas (sweet North African pancakes). And what is Mimouna all about? No one really knows.

The Rise of the Sephardim  Daniel J. ElazarCommentary.  What does it mean that Jews from non-European backgrounds are now the political majority in Israel? (1983)  SAVE

Modernity and Charisma  Yoram Bilu, Eyal Ben-AriIsrael Affairs.  Within five years of his death in 1984, Rabbi Israel Abu Hatzeira (the "Baba Sali") was a legendary saint; so was his son Baruch, jailed for corruption.  SAVE

Love the Convert  Jonah MandelJerusalem Post.  In a protest against extreme Orthodoxy, the Mimouna organizers intended to stress that accepting converts with open arms is embedded in the heritage of North African Jewry.  SAVE

SAVE "Mimouna!"

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Insight & Analysis

And It Came to Pass at Midnight  Michael PitkowskyMenachem Mendel.  Audio and video of several renditions of "Karev Yom," a Byzantine-era piyyut sung at the end of the sederSAVE

What Passover Sounded Like 370 Years Ago  Fred MacDowellOn the Main Line.  Musical notation for two end-of-seder songs in a 17th-century Haggadah is brought to life in a Toronto Jewish high school. (Video).  SAVE

National Anthem  PhilologosForward.  Israel wouldn't have to abandon "Hatikvah" to have an anthem which Muslim and Christian citizens would be proud to sing: just restore some of Naphtali Herz Imber's original lyrics.  SAVE

The Dreyfus of Classical Music  Benjamin IvryForward.  Once vilified by Schumann and Wagner for not being German enough, now Giacomo Meyerbeer's music is criticized for not being Jewish enough.  SAVE

Russia's Jewish Composers  Matt KellyUVA Today.  For a brief period prior to the Revolution, Jews were among the rising stars of Russian classical music. But they soon discovered that while Russian culture liked Jewish music, it didn't like Jews.  SAVE

Why the Nazis Hated Jazz  J.J. GouldAtlantic.  For one thing, there are the "Jewishly gloomy lyrics," set against the "hysterical rhythmic reverses characteristic of the barbarian races." Dig?.  SAVE

Flow  MatisyahuRolling Stone.  Three songs performed by the reggae fusion star, along with an interview about his changing relationship to Judaism and, yes, his recently shorn face. (Video).  SAVE

Audio/Visual

 

Sing to the Lord!

 

Of making Jewish music there is no end, but how many contemporary composers of distinguished work in this genre have been featured on From the Top, National Public Radio's program about exceptional young musicians? Jeremiah Klarman, age thirteen when he appeared on the NPR show, may be the sole exception. Now seventeen, with a demonstrated mastery of styles from classical to klezmer, and with chamber, orchestral, and pop compositions under his belt, Klarman has turned his lavish and protean talents to choral music. A premier of his latest work, the cantata Hallel, Shir v'Or ("Praise, Song, and Light"), drawing largely on well-known verses from the book of Psalms, took place in late December at Temple Emanuel in Newton, Mass.  Performed by the Zamir Chorale of Boston under the direction of Joshua R. Jacobson, it culminates in a room-rocking, soul-lifting Halleluyah! for chorus and orchestra.

A Day in the Life  Richard DyerBoston Globe.  Jeremiah Klarman spends an afternoon in 2006 with the "moved, impressed, and amazed" composer Osvald Golijov.  SAVE

Music on Jewish Themes  Jeremiah Klarman.  An annotated list.  SAVE

Halleluyah!  Jeremiah KlarmanZamir Chorale.  The final movement of Hallel, Shir v'Or. Listen to the first and second movements. Read the wordsSAVE

The Composer on the Music  Jeremiah KlarmanProgram notes on Hallel, Shir v'Or.  SAVE

SAVE "Sing to the Lord!"

Audio/Visual

Hava Nagila

 

Probably the most famous and universally beloved Jewish song of the modern era was written to a hasidic melody by Abraham Zvi Idelsohn (1882-1938). A prolific musicologist, composer, and cantor, Idelsohn wrote the song to celebrate the 1917 Balfour Declaration. In 1922, he recorded it with a Berlin men’s choir in a startlingly slow (to today’s ears) tempo. Since then it has been performed, effervescently, by Jews and non-Jews in countless arrangements and settings.

A. Z. Idelsohn  SAVE

Hava Nagila Berlin 1922  SAVE

Hava Nagila Iranian-Style  SAVE

Hava Nagila in Royal Albert Hall  SAVE

Hava Nagila Texas-Style  SAVE

SAVE "Hava Nagila"

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