This 230-page book with texts in transliteration, translations, melodies,
chords, commentary, and sources is now available as a digital download, as
a full-size (8-1/2" x 11") paperback, and in Musicians' Edition with a coil
binding. You can also buy a paperback of facsimiles of the original lyrics
I worked from (in the Hebrew characters as Itzik Zhelonek printed them).

http://yiddishemporium.com/yiddish-songs-from-warsaw-1929-1934.html

Yiddish Songs from Warsaw 1929-1934: the Itsik Zhelonek Collection

[image: Songbook: Yiddish Songs from Warsaw
Poland]<http://yiddishemporium.com/pics/yiddish-songs-warsaw-t.jpg>
In Warsaw, Poland, between the World Wars, in a little shop in the flea
market across from a used hardware store, Itzik Zhelonek bought and sold
books and records. He also printed tiny books of lyrics of the most loved
Yiddish theater songs of that time and place. He wrote: "If you don't know
the melodies, come to Itzik and he'll teach them to you."

The songs beloved by cosmopolitan Yiddish-speaking Jews before the
Holocaust were sometimes frothy and sometimes profound, sometimes satirical
and sometimes nostalgic. They were droll, sly, sweet, and poignant, dealing
with everything from "The Modern Woman" to emigration to the poverty of
scholars and their families.

Jane Peppler found these booklets in the National Library of Israel and the
Library of Agudas Chassidei Chabad in Brooklyn (some had uncut pages -
they'd never been read even once). She was struck by how many of the songs,
the biggest hits of their day, were now completely unknown, snuffed out by
the Holocaust along with the people who sang them and loved them. She
decided to hunt down the melodies for the songs in Zhelonek's books (and
the anonymous book *35 Newest Theater songs of 1929*). The melodies
trickled in one by one, from Russia, France, Israel, Boca Raton, Manhattan,
Philadelphia, Cambridge, Amherst, Winnipeg... they were found in sheet
music archives, old 78s, and in the memories of people who were there.

In the decades since World War II Yiddish has been associated with grim,
sad songs. Perhaps enough time has passed now that we can enjoy Yiddish
songs of the Jazz Age. In this 230-page book Peppler has set the newly
found melodies with chords, transliterations, translations, commentary, and
sources. It is available as a digital download, in a paperback edition, and
in a musicians' edition with spiral binding.

Three years in the making, the book contains sheet music and lyrics to
wonderful songs chosen by record-store owner Icik Zielonek (the Polish
spelling of his name) to promote his record selling business. He called
them at that time *the newest, best songs of the Yiddish theater.* Some are
still familiar and beloved, but most were lost to us until now, their
droll, nostalgic, cosmopolitan spirit seemingly irrelevant to the
post-Holocaust world. Now revived!

*Click for the Yiddish Songs from Warsaw table of contents
<http://yiddishemporium.com/ysw.html>*

*Click for a Sample song sheet from "Yiddish Songs from Warsaw"
<http://yiddishemporium.com/sample-free-yiddish-sheet-music.html>*


*Click to read my article about the Zhelonek project in Afn
Shvel:Nokhgeyendik dem shpur fun fargesener yidisher teater-muzik
<http://yiddishemporium.com/afn-shvel-artikl.html>*
__
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