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administration

Executive Board
President: Mindy Hermann
Vice President: Jerald Seti
Treasurer: Lloyd Widom
Secretary: Alicia Zalesin
Corresp. Sec.: Eric Zaidins

Staff
Executive Director: Jerald Seti
Music Director: Kenny Green
Music Instructor: Matty Mozzor
Teen Music Leaders: tbd
Assistant Music Instructors: Lori Horowitz, Neil Figler, and Dan Birenbaum

Fiddler On The Page

For generations klezmer has been taught by passing down the music from one klezmer to the next by example. It’s only been in the last two or three generations that sheet music has become an additional means of sharing the musical tradition (for the purists, the “aural tradition” is still the only way!). Learning klezmer ain’t easy, especially if, like most of us, you haven’t grown up with it. Learning new modes (scales) and melodies are one reason. Compounding the problem is learning the ornamentation and improvisation techniques that give klezmer its uniquely Jewish soul. As with jazz, these elements derive from the personality of the player so they’re typically not found in off-the-shelf arrangements. Commercial sheet music is usually limited to simple melodies. Until now, you had two choices: teach yourself by listening to and imitating klezmer recordings, and/or studying with a master.

Continue reading Fiddler On The Page

Nu?!

Now that Stephen Colbert, a Catholic from South Carolina and host of the “Colbert Report,” is using Yiddish to wish viewers a bright and happy Chanukah, people have finally started to realize that there’s nothing in the world that can’t be improved by translating it into Yiddish. Michael Wex’s new book, Just Say Nu, [...]

Going to Yale

Learning to play klezmer, for young and old alike, can be a challenge. The music isn’t often played in major or minor scales. Instead its keys, or modes, are referred to as Freygish, Misheberech and Adonoy moloch to name just three. Its various rhythms Nigun, Freylekh, Bulgar, Chosidl, Hora, Terkisher, Sirba, Sher, Taksim, and Doina, must be mastered. Not so easy if raised on a diet of rock, country, hip-hop, or even classical.

In a bygone era, klezmorim learned the melodies from each other. They were passed from musician to musician in the oral tradition; music stores didn’t exist. Imagine, no sheet music to be handed out, no recordings to buy, no iTunes to download. Continue reading Going to Yale