And we're all brothers : singing in Yiddish in contemporary North America

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Bibliographic Information

And we're all brothers : singing in Yiddish in contemporary North America

Abigail Wood

(SOAS musicology series)(An Ashgate book)

Routledge, 2016, c2013

  • : pbk

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Note

"First published 2013 by Ashgate Publisher ... First issued in paperback 2016"--T.p. verso

Bibliography: p. [187]-200

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The dawn of the twenty-first century marked a turning period for American Yiddish culture. The 'Old World' of Yiddish-speaking Eastern Europe was fading from living memory - yet at the same time, Yiddish song enjoyed a renaissance of creative interest, both among a younger generation seeking reengagement with the Yiddish language, and, most prominently via the transnational revival of klezmer music. The last quarter of the twentieth century and the early years of the twenty-first saw a steady stream of new songbook publications and recordings in Yiddish - newly composed songs, well-known singers performing nostalgic favourites, American popular songs translated into Yiddish, theatre songs, and even a couple of forays into Yiddish hip hop; musicians meanwhile engaged with discourses of musical revival, post-Holocaust cultural politics, the transformation of language use, radical alterity and a new generation of American Jewish identities. This book explores how Yiddish song became such a potent medium for musical and ideological creativity at the twilight of the twentieth century, presenting an episode in the flowing timeline of a musical repertory - New York at the dawn of the twenty-first century - and outlining some of the trajectories that Yiddish song and its singers have taken to, and beyond, this point.

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Introduction
  • Part I Contemporary Frameworks for Yiddish Song: Becoming Yiddishists
  • Narrating a canon. Part II Yiddish Song and the 'Klezmer Revival':From local to global: a new stage for Yiddish song
  • A space for reflection: creative encounters with Europe
  • Encountering the Yiddish other: Hasidic music in today's Yiddish canon
  • Technology, the sonic object and the (re)construction of Yiddish music
  • Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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