Secular Jewish musicW
Secular Jewish music

Since Biblical times, music has held an important role in many Jews' lives. Jewish music has been influenced by surrounding Gentile traditions and Jewish sources preserved over time. Jewish musical contributions on the other hand tend to reflect the cultures of the countries in which Jews live, the most notable examples being classical and popular music in the United States and Europe. However, other music is unique to particular Jewish communities, such as klezmer of Eastern Europe.

Efim AlexandrovW
Efim Alexandrov

Efim Alexandrov — Russian artist of "spoken word” genre and well known performer of Jewish music paying special attention to Yiddish folk songs as a part of the program of saving the culture of Yiddish which is considered an endangered language in Eastern Europe and Russia. He is a Meritorious Artist. (2007).

Bar Kokhba (album)W
Bar Kokhba (album)

Bar Kokhba is a double album by John Zorn, recorded between 1994 and 1996. It features music from Zorn's Masada project, rearranged for small ensembles. It also features the original soundtrack from The Art of Remembrance – Simon Wiesenthal, a film by Hannah Heer and Werner Schmiedel (1994–95).

Black performance of Jewish musicW
Black performance of Jewish music

Black Performance of Jewish Music has a long, studied, history of Black and Jewish musicians, songwriters, and performers influencing each other through their unique cultures that helped provide both groups with inspiration. Along with this collaboration, there is also the element of Jewish songs having a direct impact on Black musicians. Throughout musical history there are many iconic moments where Black artists performed Jewish music, including notable figures such as Paul Robeson, Cab Calloway, and Aretha Franklin. Many of these Black artists claim to feel a connection to the Jewish songs and people from their shared desire for freedom and sadness from leaving their ancestral lands.

Leon BotsteinW
Leon Botstein

Leon Botstein is a Swiss-American conductor, educator, and scholar serving as the President of Bard College.

Chabad niggunimW
Chabad niggunim

Like many other Hassidic movements, Chabad-Lubavitch has its own unique niggunim, or traditional melodies. Chabad niggunim were either composed or taught by the Rebbe of Chabad or their Hassidim. Niggunim are used to aid for meditation during Chasidic prayer or Torah study, as well as during farbrengens. some of these ancient Chabad melodies have recently made their way into mainstream music.

Brian ChoperW
Brian Choper

Brian Choper is an American percussionist, band manager, and author. He has more than 30 years of experience playing both nationally and internationally, has been featured on nine CD's, authored an educational book on music management, and started his own entertainment management company, Washington's Entertainment Connection/Bigshot Records.

Connie Francis Sings Jewish FavoritesW
Connie Francis Sings Jewish Favorites

Connie Francis sings Jewish Favorites is a studio album of Jewish songs recorded by American entertainer Connie Francis.

Degenerate musicW
Degenerate music

Degenerate music was a label applied in the 1930s by the Nazi government in Germany to certain forms of music that it considered harmful or decadent. The Nazi government's concerns about degenerate music were a part of its larger and better-known campaign against degenerate art. In both cases, the government attempted to isolate, discredit, discourage, or ban the works.

Lawrence DermerW
Lawrence Dermer

Lawrence Dermer is a Grammy nominated and BMI award winning record producer and multi-platinum songwriter.

Erran Baron Cohen Presents: Songs in the Key of HanukkahW
Erran Baron Cohen Presents: Songs in the Key of Hanukkah

Erran Baron Cohen Presents: Songs in the key Of Hanukkah is a studio album by British singer Erran Baron Cohen. It was fully released on 13 April 2010 through WaterTower Records and distributed by New Line Records. The album features guest appearances from Idan Raichel, Jules Brookes, Yasmin Levy, and Y-Love. It was supported by eleven singles: "Dreidel", "Hanukkah, Oh Hanukkah", "Ocho Kandalikas". The album received generally positive reviews from critics.

Irving FieldsW
Irving Fields

Irving Fields was an American pianist and lounge music artist who was born in New York City. Some of his most noteworthy compositions include "Miami Beach Rhumba"; "Managua, Nicaragua"; and "Chantez, Chantez," covered by Dinah Shore in 1957. From November 1, 1954 to January 3, 1955, he and his orchestra appeared on the DuMont Television Network series The Ilona Massey Show, hosted by Ilona Massey.

Greatest Hits (The Rabbis' Sons album)W
Greatest Hits (The Rabbis' Sons album)

Greatest Hits is a compilation album by The Rabbis' Sons. It contains six songs from Hal'lu, three songs from To Life, two songs from Shalom and one song from The Rabbis Sing.

Hal'luW
Hal'lu

Hal'lu is the first Rabbis' Sons album. It contained one of the only two songs they ever released with Yiddish lyrics. "Mi Ho-ish", "Rabos Machshovos" and "Hal'lu" were among the group's most popular songs.

Moritz HenleW
Moritz Henle

Moritz Henle was a prominent German composer of liturgical music and cantor of the Jewish reform movement.

History of music in the biblical periodW
History of music in the biblical period

Knowledge of the biblical period is mostly from literary references in the Bible and post-biblical sources. Religion and music historian Herbert Lockyer, Jr. writes that "music, both vocal and instrumental, was well cultivated among the Hebrews, the New Testament Christians, and the Christian church through the centuries." He adds that "a look at the Old Testament reveals how God's ancient people were devoted to the study and practice of music, which holds a unique place in the historical and prophetic books, as well as the Psalter."

Hora (dance)W
Hora (dance)

Hora, also known as horo and oro, is a type of circle dance originating in the Balkans but also found in other countries.

Abraham Zevi IdelsohnW
Abraham Zevi Idelsohn

Abraham Zevi Idelsohn was a prominent Jewish ethnologist, musicologist and composer, who conducted several comprehensive studies of Jewish music around the world.

Jewish western art musicW
Jewish western art music

The Jewish western art music is the art music which is created for performing and singing in a synagogue and is similar to the creation of church music known as classical music. Musical composition of verses for service is used for playing in liturgical events, holidays and shabbats as well as para- liturgical service events such as: weddings, Brit Milahs, and other performances with a Religious ground motive.

KivinuW
Kivinu

Kivinu was the fifth original album by The Rabbis' Sons. It was released in 1996 – 22 years after their previous album of original music and 28 years after all of the original members last appeared together on the same album. The songs were first taught by Rabbi Chait at Maarava Machon Rubin during their Thursday night mishmar.

Robert LachmannW
Robert Lachmann

Robert Lachmann was a German ethnomusicologist, polyglot, orientalist and librarian. He was an expert in the musical traditions of the Middle East, a member of the Berlin School of Comparative Musicology and one of its founding fathers. After having been forced to leave Germany under the Nazis in 1935 because of his Jewish background, he emigrated to Palestine and established a rich archive of ethnomusicological recordings for the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Leo LeviW
Leo Levi

Leo Levi (1912–1982) was an Italian musicologist

Frank LondonW
Frank London

Frank London is an American klezmer trumpeter who also plays jazz and world music.

Moscow Choral SynagogueW
Moscow Choral Synagogue

The Moscow Choral Synagogue is one of the main synagogues in Russia and in the former Soviet Union. It is located in central Basmanny District at 10 Bolshoy Spasogolinischevsky Lane, close to Kitai-Gorod Metro station. Chief Rabbi Adolf Shayevich is its spiritual head.

My Son the Jazz Drummer!W
My Son the Jazz Drummer!

My Son the Jazz Drummer! is an album by drummer Shelly Manne performing jazz adaptations of traditional and contemporary Jewish music, recorded in 1962 and released on the Contemporary label. The album was re-released on CD in 2004 as Steps to the Desert.

New Shabbos WaltzW
New Shabbos Waltz

New Shabbos Waltz is an album by American musicians David Grisman and Andy Statman, released in 2006. It is a follow-up to their 1995 album Songs of Our Fathers and is a tribute to Grisman's and Statman's Jewish heritage. The album contains instrumental recordings from traditional Jewish repertoire, old and new.

PJ LibraryW
PJ Library

PJ Library is a program of the Harold Grinspoon Foundation, a North American Jewish non-profit organization based in West Springfield, Massachusetts. It was created in December 2005 as a Jewish engagement and literacy program for Jewish families with young children.

The Rabbis SingW
The Rabbis Sing

The Rabbis Sing is the final original Rabbis' Sons album. It was released under the group name Baruch Chait and Old Friends. It saw a return to the robust harmonies of the original two albums as Itzy Weinberger rejoined the group and Yechiel Eckstein filled the vocal part that was usually occupied by Label Sharfman. This was the only Rabbis' Sons' album to include music written by Shlomo Carlebach. It was also the only album to feature a song with English lyrics.

The Rabbis' SonsW
The Rabbis' Sons

The Rabbis' Sons is a Jewish music group that released most of its albums between 1967 and 1974. It consisted of Rabbis Baruch Chait, Label Sharfman (vocals), Itzy Weinberger (vocals) and Michael Zheutlin, with David Nulman on steel guitar and Mickey Lane on bass fiddle. The group got its name because Chait, Sharfman and Weinberger were all sons of rabbis.

Sabbath in ParadiseW
Sabbath in Paradise

Sabbath in Paradise is a documentary film by Claudia Heuermann examining contemporary Jewish musical culture in New York's avant garde Jazz scene in the 1990s. It features concert footage and interviews with Anthony Coleman, Marc Ribot, Andy Statman, David Krakauer, Frank London, John Zorn and others.

Shalom (album)W
Shalom (album)

Shalom is the third album by The Rabbis' Sons and contained the only Sephardic melody they would ever record. Harachaman would become one of the group's most popular songs. To make up for the lack of the vocal presence of Sharfman and Weinberger, many songs contain overdubbed harmonies of separate vocals by Michael Zheutlin.

Symphony No. 1 (Bernstein)W
Symphony No. 1 (Bernstein)

Leonard Bernstein's Symphony No. 1 Jeremiah was composed in 1942. Jeremiah is a programmatic work, following the Biblical story of the prophet Jeremiah. The third movement uses texts from the Book of Lamentations in the Hebrew Bible, sung by a mezzo-soprano. The work won the New York Music Critics' Circle Award for the best American work of 1944.

Symphony No. 3 (Bernstein)W
Symphony No. 3 (Bernstein)

Symphony No. 3 "Kaddish" is a programmatic choral symphony by Leonard Bernstein, published in 1963. It is a dramatic work written for a large orchestra, a full choir, a boys' choir, a soprano soloist and a narrator. "Kaddish" refers to the Jewish prayer that is chanted at every synagogue service for the dead but never mentions "death."

Terry Gibbs Plays Jewish Melodies in JazztimeW
Terry Gibbs Plays Jewish Melodies in Jazztime

Terry Gibbs Plays Jewish Melodies in Jazztime is a 1963 studio album by Terry Gibbs.

Turetsky Choir Art GroupW
Turetsky Choir Art Group

Turetsky Choir is a Russian men's a cappella ensemble and musical collective under the direction of Mikhail Turetsky. Their voices range from tenore contraltino to basso profundo.