(51 results found)

Marsh (LKT)
… Members of the Boyan community and young Hasidim of other communities use this term broadly to refer to joyful …
Shofet Kol Ha'aretz
… and an “alternative” tune (seven variants) preferred by the communities of the “Polish rite” (East of the Elbe and …

Freylekhs (LKT)
… “Other dances performed at weddings in East European communities were:... Redl, Frailachs, Karahod, Hopke , … the events occurred reasonably close to the following: The communities of Tzfat and Tiberias were the first to … except perhaps a few niggunim borrowed from the Oriental communities of Jerusalem. Coming to Meron, they would …
Yom Yom Odeh: Towards the Biography of a Hebrew Baidaphon Record
… fit in here? If historical records had allowed the Jewish communities that emigrated from countries such as Syria, … Aleppian ḥazzanim on the liturgical styles of the Sephardic communities in Jerusalem (1997), couched his belief in … one of the founders of the “ Kehillot Sharot [Singing Communities]”, a nation-wide project that brings together …

Sher
… much earlier than the nineteenth century, in many Jewish communities and especially in Jewish Ashkenazi communities, Poland, Italy and Turkey, an issue which we do … who heard this song sung by boys imitating the Haredi communities standing beneath the window of the wedding hall …
A centerpiece of the High Holydays liturgy: Shofet Kol Ha'aretz in Moroccan and Yemenite versions
… and an “alternative” tune (seven variants) preferred by the communities of the “Polish rite” (East of the Elbe and …
A Moroccan Synagogue Service
… Moroccan liturgy in comparison to other traditional Jewish communities where a soloist ḥazzan stands out. Singing of …

Society for Jewish Folk Music
… theater and music circles of New York and other Jewish communities of the period. His arrangements lack the …

Hatikvah: Conceptions, Receptions and Reflections
… I knew, the same one that is sung today in all the Jewish communities. At the beginning, neither the song nor the … found in the liturgical repertory of the Western Sephardic communities. It is the melody of the piyyut Lekh le-shalom … Ashkenazi) melody for ‘Etz hayyim hi’ that is also a distant variant of Lekh le-shalom geshem . [30] Gradenwitz, …