Dear Safranim,

Please join us for this very special program. It is free and open to the
public on a first-come, first-served basis.

Author @ the Library:
Klezmer: Music, History and Memory

With Dr. Walter Zev Feldman (author, cimbalom) and Deborah Strauss (violin)

Sponsored by the Dorot Jewish Division in cooperation with Yiddish New York

Thursday, December 22, 2016
6:30 PM
Mid-Manhattan Library (40th St. and 5th Ave.)
Wheelchair accessible

Klezmer: Music, History and Memory: Aesthetic and Cultural Dimensions

published by Oxford University Press, Fall 2016

A lecture and musical program with Dr. Walter Zev Feldman (author, cimbal)
and Deborah Strauss (violin)

Emerging in 16th century Prague, the klezmer became a central cultural
feature of the largest transnational Jewish community of modern times - the
Ashkenazim of Eastern Europe. Much of the musical and choreographic history
of the Ashkenazim is embedded in the European klezmer repertoire, which
functioned as a kind of non-verbal communal memory. The klezmorim ensured
that their music would be mediate between the secular and the religious
poles, and between the East and the West. In these musical choices they
were unique among all other Jewish communities of modern times. While many
klezmorim emigrated to the Americas, within decades many key patterns both
of klezmer music and of Jewish dance changed fundamentally. The klezmer’s
music became restricted to dance music and no longer featured display
pieces or substantial improvisations. Dance itself lost the gestural and
expressive qualities that had been its hallmark in Eastern Europe. In
America the klezmer music of South East Europe came to predominate and
within that mainly what is termed the “transitional” repertoire originating
in Moldova, whose Jewish element was somewhat marginal. In particular the
mediating role of klezmer music between secular and religious poles of
Jewish culture collapsed. Thus to appreciate the klezmer music of Eastern
Europe requires a knowledge of a variety of sources and an immersion in the
Ashkenazic oral tradition of musical articulation.

Walter Zev Feldman is a leading researcher in both Ottoman and Jewish
music. During the mid-1970s he and Andy Statman studied with Dave Tarras
and were two of the creators of the klezmer revival; at that time Feldman
reintroduced the cimbal (dulcimer) into klezmer music. Their 1979 recording
Jewish Klezmer Music became a classic. He co-founded the Khevrisa ensemble
with Steven Greenman—their CD European Klezmer Music was issued by
Smithsonian-Folkways in 2000. His new book Klezmer: Music, History and
Memory will be published by Oxford University Press this year. He is a
teacher of Ashkenazic dance, and has taught both music and dance in Israel,
Germany, USA, Canada and Abu Dhabi (UAE). He is currently a Visiting
Professor of Music at NYU Abu Dhabi, Director of the Ansky Institute for
Jewish Expressive Culture, and board member of the Corpus Musicae
Ottomanicae at the WWU in Münster, Germany.

Deborah Strauss is an internationally acclaimed klezmer violinist and
educator who has been active in klezmer and Yiddish music and in
multigenerational Jewish education for over 30 years. She is a member of
the Strauss/Warschauer Duo, the intercontinental groups Voices of Ashkenaz
and Figelin and was a long-time member of the Klezmer Conservatory Band.
Deborah was featured in the Emmy award-winning film Itzhak Perlman: In the
Fiddler's House, appears in the film Theodore Bikel: In the Shoes of Sholom
Aleichem and has performed with the Grammy awardwinning Klezmatics. She
performs across North America, South America, Western and Eastern Europe
and Israel, and leads workshops and classes annually at the Jewish Culture
Festival in Krakow, Yiddish Summer Weimar, Yiddish New York and KlezKanada.
Deborah is also a highly regarded Yiddish dance leader and an award-winning
Jewish children’s educator. She studied violin at Rutgers University and
ethnomusicology at the University of Chicago.

For more information, please visit our event page at:
https://www.nypl.org/events/programs/2016/12/22/klezmer-music-history-and-memory

Sincerely,

Amanda

-- 
Amanda (Miryem-Khaye) Seigel
Librarian
Dorot Jewish Division, Room 111
The New York Public Library
Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
42nd Street and Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10018

Reference Desk: 212-930-0601
Fax: 212-642-0141
Email: amandasei...@nypl.org
Website: https://www.nypl.org/locations/divisions/jewish-division
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/schwarzmanbuilding
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