The Liturgy of Beta Israel: Music of the Ethiopian Jewish Prayer. 2019. Jewish Music Research Centre, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Anthology of Music Traditions in Israel, no. 26, AMTI0118. Digital editing and mastering by Avi Nahmias and Gil Stein. Annotated by Simha Arom, Frank Alvarez-Pereyre, Shoshana Ben-Dor and Olivier Tourny. Produced by Edwin Seroussi. 192-page book with notes in English and Hebrew. Hebrew translation by Tova Shani. Tables, bibliography. 3 CDs. CD1, 15 tracks (58:43); CD 2, 12 tracks (51:50); CD 3, 14 tracks (66:02).

2019 ◽  
Vol 51 ◽  
pp. 297-298
Author(s):  
STEVEN KAPLAN
Ethnomusic ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-157
Author(s):  
Michael Lukin ◽  
◽  
Edwin Seroussi ◽  

The article is a collaboration of two research projects: first one is the new an- notated edition of Moisei Beregovskii’s collection of Hassidic tunes (1946) in prepa- ration by Yaakov Mazor in the framework of the Jewish Music Research Centre of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The second project is a collaborative Israeli- Ukrainian project titled “The Hassidic Nign in Right Bank Ukraine and East Galicia: Between Autochthonous and External Soundscapes” lead by the three additional au- thors of the present article. The article is dedicated to the study of music in Ukrainian Hasidism, the main representative kind of which is nign – a religious song, performed mainly without words, by men, solo or collectively, in a monophonic texture, and fulfilling various religious functions of mystical background. Nign has apparently started to crystallize from the mid-eighteenth century onwards on the territories of Podillya and Volyn, with the consolidation of the Hassidic movement in those areas of Ukraine (then Po- land and later on the Russian Empire). Noticed by many scholars, the affinity that the Hassidic tunes have with the mu- sic of both Jewish and their co-territorial non-Jewish societies in Ukraine has led to the key question of this study, which is: What insights one can gain from the compara- tive analysis of melodies to the fuller picture of the Ukrainian Hassidic soundscape. The methodology of the study of the Hassidic nign in its historical, regional and conceptual Ukrainian contexts is based on comparative analysis of the nign (the nign itself attributed to the founder of the Chernobyl dynasty, Rabbi Mordechai of Cher- nobyl, its tune transcribed by M. Beregovskii from memory in 1920 and republished many times), its another version transcribed by Joseph Achron, and the four Ukrainian compositions from the anthology of Ukrainian folk melodies by Z. Lysko. The preliminary results of the comparative study of these musical texts in terms of form, modality, melodic contour, rhythm and performance practice, in this stage of the research show more differences than similarities between Hassidic and Ukrainian musical texts and contexts.


1973 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-198
Author(s):  
Nicholas de Lange

1971 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 181
Author(s):  
Laurence D. Loeb ◽  
Israel Adler ◽  
Hanoch Avenary ◽  
Bathja Bayer

1978 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 183
Author(s):  
Johanna Spector ◽  
Israel Adler ◽  
Bathja Bayer

1975 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 119
Author(s):  
Simha Arom ◽  
Amnon Shiloah ◽  
Bathja Bayer

2015 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-37
Author(s):  
Susana Weich-Shahak

This article, based exclusively on examples that the author has recorded from the oral tradition of the Sephardic Jews, presents the three main genres of the Sephardic traditional repertoire, romancero, coplas and cancionero. These three poetic and musical genres show the vitality, the richness and the variety of the Judeo-Spanish repertoire and have received focused attention by literary scholars and musicologists, through intensive fieldwork, recordings, analysis and interviews. This article presents a system of classification of the repertoire according to interdisciplinary parameters. All the examples belong to those the author has collected in work at the Jewish Music Research Center of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The recordings from her own fieldwork (1974–2014), together with those of other scholars, resulted in the world’s richest collection of the Judeo-Spanish repertoire, and is stored and catalogued at the National Sound Archives of the Israel National Library, open to scholars, singers and lovers of the Judeo-Spanish tradition.


1971 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 223
Author(s):  
Simha Arom ◽  
Yuval ◽  
Israel Adler ◽  
Hanoch Avenary ◽  
Bathja Bayer

1989 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 151
Author(s):  
Peter Laki ◽  
Israel Adler ◽  
Bathja Bayer ◽  
Eliyahu Schleifer

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