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George Robinson, GRComm@ concentric.net writes for the Jewish Week. His book, "Essential Judaism," was published in hardcover by Pocket Books, March 2000. You can find out more at his website.
Articles by George Robinson, available on the KlezmerShack, are:
2004 Chanukah Roundup, by George Robinson, sent 2 Dec 2004.
The Year's Best: the annual "best of" column, by George Robinson, sent 25 Nov 2002.
A Religious Experience: A roundup of recent Jewish liturgical music, by George Robinson, sent 26 Aug 2002.
More Than Klezmer: A sampler of Yiddish vaudeville, folk music and even art song, sent 9 Aug 2002.
Spring Sephardic Music Roundup, send 3 May 2002.
The Spring Roundup, part 1, sent 9 Mar 2002.
The Spring Roundup, part 2, sent 9 Mar 2002.
The Best of 2001 - Hanukah suggestions, sent 7 Dec 2001.
Isaac Stern: Beyond the Fiddle to the Heart of a Man, sent out 5 Oct 2001.
Sounds for the Jewish New Year, sent out 23 Nov 2001.
Slobin on Beregovski (and the survival of Klezmer Music), sent out 30 Aug 2001.
Women of Valor, sent out 15 Aug 2001.
Shabbat, for Starters, sent out 3 Jun 2001.
From Liturgical Rock to the Postmodern, sent out 15 May 2001.
A Sephardic Passover, sent out 25 Mar 2001.
Oh, Klezmer, sent out 18 Mar 2001.
Jewish Classical Music, sent out 1 Mar 2001.
Best of 2000, send out 23 Dec 2000.
Holiday Music for Hanukkah, 6 Dec 2000.
Kidding on the Square, 9/29/00, from the Jewish Week
From the Catskills to Canada, 6/15/00, from the Jewish Week
Sephardic Survey, 05/00, from the Jewish Week
1999 Klezmer Wrapup, from the Jewish Week
Sisters in Swing, 12/15/99, from the Jewish Week
Bending the Genres, October 1998, from the Jewish Week
The Klezmer Drums of Passion, September 1998, from the Jewish Week
Drums of Passion, summer, 1998, from the Jewish Week
Other klezmer articles
on the Internet
People | Bands | Album Reviews | Sources | Classifieds | other klezmer articles on the Internet
Eight Nights of Hanukah The annual survey, by George Robinsonfrom the author, 2 Dec '04.
Reprinted by permission of the author.
Eight nights of Hanukah, eight packages of related music for the well-endowed gift-giver. Hey, you don't have to buy all of them, you know. All joking aside, the recordings in this column just fell naturally into groupings that cover nearly the entire range of contemporary Jewish music. So there's something for every taste, even music to eat latkes by.
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First Night—Hanukah recordingsKlezmatics / Woody Guthrie's Happy Joyous Hanuka
A Hanukah Feast
Botton, Richard / Ladino Reverie
Celebrate Hip Hop: Jewish Artists From Around the World
Celebrate Klezmer
Celebrate Yiddish
Fleischer, Tsippi / Around the World with Tsippi Fleischer
Green, Marty / A Boy Named Sureh
Greenman, Steven / Stempenyu's Dream
Jaros, Bonita Nahoum / Kantigas de Mi Chikes
Kanter, Simcha / Wellsprings
Kleztraphobix / Another Bottle of Vodka
Lichtenberg, Lenka / Open the Gate—Break Down the Walls
Musleah, Rahel / Hodu: Jewish Rhythms from Baghdad to India
Schubert, Gerry / Return to Eden—Jewish Music for the Universal Soul
Segev, Inbal and Ron Regev / Nigun: A Celebration of Jewish Music
Veroba, Gershon / Impressions
Klezmatics / Woody Guthrie's Happy Joyous Hanuka (self-distributed). A special, limited-edition recording by the 'Matics of songs rediscovered by Woody's daughter Nora in 1998. Like most of Woody's childrens' songs, this is cute and effervescent but wears thin pretty quickly. The playing is terrific, as one might expect, and Lorin Sklamberg's vocals are charming. Great packaging that kids will love. At 32 minutes this is just about the right length but as a full-price CD, it's a bit skimpy. Available from www.klezmatics.com. Rating: 3 stars, but add another star if you're under 12.
Second Night—Comedy set to musicA Hanukah Feast (Hungry for Music). Twenty cuts by as many artists, raising funds for a good cause, a DC-based program that brings music—sheet music, books and instruments—to poor children. This is about as wide and wild a range of Jewish musics as this entire column, from the neo-klez of Alexandria Kleztet to the pure Ladino folk of Flory Jagoda, the heavy metal Latino rap of Hip-Hop Hoodíos to the country-western of Honky Tonk Confidential. Uneven, but on the whole great fun. Available at www.hungryformusic.com, and you can also do a little tzedekah for the festival, too. Rating: 4½ stars.
Green, Marty / A Boy Named Sureh (Benchmark). Any joke that needs explanation is going suffer, and Green feels obliged to open every cut with an introductory speech on the problems of translating Gentile songs into Yiddish. On the other hand, Johnny Cash, Goethe, Kris Kristofferson and "My Way" in the mame-loshn are pretty funny no matter how you slice it. Inventive translations, aided immeasurably by Green's deadpan delivery and his self-deprecating wit. To order, call 888-378-9273 or go to www.onforeignsoil.com. Rating: 4 stars.
Third Night—Klezmer old-style and newVeroba, Gershon / Impressions (Sameach). Veroba is a gifted mimic (as well as a trained hazan), and this set is a smarter version of the kind of loving parody that Schlock Rock have been dining out on for two decades. I'm not sure why you would want to listen to a frum version of Chicago or The Monkees or Lennon and McCartney, but if you feel so inclined, these are clever and the musical imitations are dead-on. Rating: 3 stars.
Greenman, Steven / Stempenyu's Dream (Ohio Arts Council). This is an ambitious two-CD set of original compositions by Greenman, the violinist for Khevrisa, among others. He's one of the best of the musicians who are working their way back to pre-New World klezmer, emphasizing the interplay of fiddle and tsimbl in a sound that is at once more foreign and yet perhaps more natural to American ears. He is ably abetted by Walter Zev Feldman, Pete Rushefsky, Stuart Brotman, and several other high-caliber talents. At a time when the klezmer revival was beginning to feel played out, guys like Greenman have brought something new (i.e., very old) to the table with gratifying results. Rating: 5 stars.
Fourth Night—Ladino songfestsKleztraphobix / Another Bottle of Vodka (self-distributed). Meanwhile back in the new world, a brass-based wildly swinging set from Kleztraphobix. Their second CD is party music with an edge. Occasionally it's a rough edge, but the energy level they achieve is worth those rare slips. Great fun. Rating: 4 stars.
Botton, Richard / Ladino Reverie (The Songs of My Sephardic Life) (self-distributed). This record is clearly a labor of love. Botton, the cantor emeritus at Central Synagogue in NYC, grew up with Ladino songs in his family and he's obviously wanted to do this recital for a long time. The repertoire is a beautiful one and he clearly is deeply conversant with it. But his voice no longer has the flexibility, the lilt, that this material requires and power is no substitute. The result is a set that is only intermittently effective, most tellingly in the moments when Botton drops down to mezzo voce and treats the songs like the lullabies that many are. If only he had made this record a decade earlier.... Available from www.richardbotton.com. Rating: 3 stars.
Fifth Night—Classical recitalsJaros, Bonita Nahoum / Kantigas de Mi Chikes (Los Tanyaderos). Jaros is another singer who grew up in a Ladinophone household and remembers her childhood songs fondly. Los Tanyaderos are a deft instrumental group specializing in Sephardic song and the match of band and singer is felicitious. I find Jaros's vibrato a bit insistent, her manner rather brittle, but this is an adequate sampler of a vibrant musical tradition. Available from Hatikvah Music (www.hatikvahmusic.com or 1-323-655-7083). Rating: 3 stars.
Fleischer, Tsippi / Around the World with Tsippi Fleischer (Vienna Modern Masters). Late modernism at is spiky best. Fleischer is a sharp-thinking composer with a playful sense of harmonics and a taste for unusual instrumentation, sort of an Israeli Satie. This CD features 13 of her compositions, none of them longer than 16 minutes; she's a miniaturist of real heft. Rating 4½ stars.
Sixth Night—Female singer-songwritersSegev, Inbal and Ron Regev / Nigun: A Celebration of Jewish Music (Vox Classics). This must be the fourth CD of Jewish-themed cello I've reviewed in the past year. Where would Jewish classical musicians be without Ernst Bloch? Inbal is an excellent cellist and she milks the melodramatic potential of Bloch and Paul Ben-Haim for all its worth. I prefer the cooler folkloric renderings of Joachim Stutchewsky, the most interesting material on this set. Rating 3½ stars.
Lichtenberg, Lenka / Open the Gate—Break Down the Walls (Sunflower). Second CD from this Canadian artist, a step forward from her first, with some smart writing. I find her vocals a bit mannered, but she's definitely got something and the lyrics are frequently clever, in four different languages. Available from www.lenkalichtenberg.com. Rating: Rating 4 stars.
Seventh Night—Male singer-songwritersMusleah, Rahel / Hodu: Jewish Rhythms from Baghdad to India (self-distributed). The musical traditions of the Jews of India are among the least familiar to American listeners. Musleah grew up in these traditions and has a sure feel for them. Her little-girl soprano bestows a certain poignance on material that is already freighted with a certain sense of loss. The result is a lovely collection of piquant recordings that will be a revelation to those who have not been exposed to this vibrant musical tradition. Available from www.rahelsjewishindia.com. Rating: 5 stars.
Kanter, Simcha / Wellsprings (IgraRama). A smart, hip set of neo-Hasidic acoustic rock. Kanter and Co. sound like "REM Unplugged and Frum," with that band's patented drive and snap. Definitely worth checking out. Available from www.igrarama.com. Rating: 4½ stars.
Final Night—A groaning table of musical smorgasbordsSchubert, Gerry / Return to Eden—Jewish Music for the Universal Soul (self-distributed). Okay, this isn't a singer-songwriter set. Actually, it's a heavy-duty symphonic/choral version of liturgical standards. Think Montovani at the peak of his career. If you like "easy listening" music of the '50s, this is the set for you, polished, professional and bombastic. Available from www.gerryschubert.com. Rating: 2 stars, unless Peter Nero is your glezele tay.
Celebrate Hip Hop: Jewish Artists From Around the World (Craig and Co.) Craig Taubman has been putting out his "celebrate" series anthologies for a while now, and they are a handy introduction to the state of Jewish music. If anyone needed proof of the pervasiveness of hip-hop or its validity as a cross-cultural site for asserting identity, this set should convince them. I'm convinced, 'cause this is a good a hip-hop sampler as I've heard all year. Period. Available from www.celebrateseries.com or 1-800-6-CRAIG-8. Rating: Rating 5 stars.
Celebrate Klezmer (Craig and Co.). The second of Taubman's new anthologies (alphabetically) is a solid sampler of contempo klez sounds, geared towards mainstream but inventive bands like the Klez Dispensers, KCB and Shtreiml, but with a dollop of Old World New Klez—Veretski Pass, Steven Greenman, Pete Rushefsky, Khupe—and a couple of rad combos like the 'Matics and Frank London's Brass All-Stars. Smartly chosen survey of the scene and fun enough to stand on its own. Available from www.celebrateseries.com or 1-800-6-CRAIG-8. Rating: 5 stars.
Celebrate Yiddish (Craig and Co.). One of the nicest things about the new "Celebrate" disks is that Taubman's producers (Frank London and Loren Sklamberg on this set and the klezmer CD) have gone for the unexpected wherever possible. I could do without the Theodore Bikel and Avraham Fried cuts (more for the '60s orchestral backing on each than the singing), but any set that includes Adrienne Cooper, Wolf Krakowski and Seymour Rechtzeit is not to be sneezed at. Available from www.celebrateseries.com or 1-800-6-CRAIG-8. Rating: 4 stars.
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