Jewish music
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Jewish music
Jewish music is the music and melodies of the Jewish people. It includes religious music, like songs sung at the synagogue and in homes during prayers, and secular music, such as klezmer. Some parts of Jewish music may have started in biblical times, like Biblical music, but different Jewish communities developed their own rhythms and sounds based on where they lived.
In the nineteenth century, changes in religious practices led to new religious songs that used styles from classical music. Around the same time, scientists began studying Jewish music using a field called ethnomusicology. Experts like Edwin Seroussi say that what we call Jewish music today comes from many history events and influences. Many modern Jewish composers have been inspired by these different musical traditions.
Religious Jewish music
Main article: Religious Jewish music
The history of religious Jewish music goes back a long way. It started with songs and melodies used in special services. The earliest music in Jewish places of worship was similar to what was used in a special building called the Temple. It had choirs and instruments like lyres, harps, and drums. After the Temple was destroyed, these traditions continued in new places called synagogues.
Jewish prayer music uses special musical patterns called modes. These help identify different types of prayers. Cantors, who lead the singing, used to make up their own tunes within these patterns. Later, many of these tunes were written down, but some cantors still create their own music today.
Traditional Jewish services usually don’t use instruments. The main singer, called a cantor, leads the songs, and the congregation responds. There are many types of songs used in Jewish services. These songs come from different parts of the Jewish world and are sung in Hebrew, Aramaic, or other languages.
Main article: Jewish prayer modes
Secular Jewish music
Main article: Secular Jewish music
Secular Jewish music and dances have been shaped by both local traditions and Jewish traditions.
Klezmer
Main article: Klezmer
In the 15th century, Ashkenazi Jews in Eastern Europe created a tradition of secular Jewish music. Musicians called kleyzmorim or kleyzmerim performed dance songs for weddings and celebrations. These songs were usually in Yiddish.
Sephardic/Ladino
Main article: Sephardic music
Sephardic music began in medieval Spain, where songs were performed at royal courts. Over time, it absorbed influences from Spain, Morocco, Argentina, Turkey, Greece, and more. Sephardic songs include different kinds of songs, such as love songs and spiritual songs. Lyrics can be in several languages, including Hebrew for religious songs, and Ladino.
These traditions spread from Spain to Morocco (the Western Tradition) and parts of the Ottoman Empire (the Eastern Tradition), including Greece, Jerusalem, the Balkans, and Egypt. Sephardic music adapted to each place, taking in sounds and rhythms from different regions, such as Balkan rhythms in 9
8 time, and the Turkish maqam mode.
Jewish art music
Preclassical, classical, romantic and 20th-century composers
Salamone Rossi (1570 – c. 1630) of Mantua made choral pieces called "The Songs of Solomon", based on Jewish religious and biblical texts.
Many famous musicians from Jewish families in the 1800s made beautiful music, but it wasn't always linked to Jewish traditions. Jacques Offenbach (1819–1880), a well-known composer of light operas, grew up with Jewish music, but his own music did not reflect that style. Felix Mendelssohn, who was a grandson of a famous Jewish philosopher Moses Mendelssohn, remembered his Jewish roots even after he converted to Christianity. Though he sometimes used Christian ideas in his music, none of it can be called Jewish in style.
The Jewish national revival in art music
Main article: Jewish art music
At the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, many Jewish composers wanted to create a special Jewish sound in their music. A group called the St. Petersburg Society for Jewish Folkmusic, led by Joel Engel, traveled to Jewish villages called "shtetls" in Russia. They collected thousands of traditional Yiddish songs and turned them into new pieces for voices and instruments. This music mixed the sad melodies of the shtetl with the rich harmonies of famous Russian composers.
Jewish composers outside of Russia also wanted to explore their musical heritage. Ernest Bloch (1880–1959), who moved from Switzerland to the United States, wrote pieces like Schelomo for cello and orchestra, and Sacred Service, which was the first to set Jewish prayers in a grand orchestral style. Bloch said he was inspired by the deep emotions and strong sense of fairness in Jewish tradition.
Darius Milhaud (1892–1974) grew up hearing the music of Jewish families in Aix-en-Provence, which greatly influenced his work. His opera Esther de Carpentras shows this influence. Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco (1895–1968), who moved from Italy to America before World War II, often used Jewish themes in his music, including songs in Ladino, the language of Sephardic Jews.
Israeli music
Main article: Music of Israel
In the 1930s, many Jewish musicians moved to Israel. They wanted to create new music that showed Israel's growing identity. Over time, this led to a lot of new and beautiful Israeli art music. Today, famous Israeli composers include Betty Oliveri, Tsippi Fleischer, Mark Kopytman, and Yitzhak Yedid.
People wrote popular songs from the beginning of Jewish settlement in Israel. Early songs used tunes from German, Russian, or traditional Jewish music but with new Hebrew words. Later, in the 1920s, they tried to make a special Hebrew music style, borrowing ideas from Arabic and other Middle Eastern music. This new style helped connect people to their past.
Youth, labor, and community groups helped grow this music, especially before and after Israel became a nation in 1948. They used music to build a new national identity and to teach new immigrants the Hebrew language. Today, public singing is still a big part of Israeli culture.
Main article: Mizrahi music
Mizrahi music is a modern style in Israel that mixes Israeli music with sounds from Arabic and Mediterranean music, like from Greece. These songs often feature violins or string instruments and include Middle Eastern rhythms. A well-known singer in this style is Zohar Argov.
Non-Jewish composers using Jewish music
Some composers who are not Jewish have used Jewish music in their work.
For example, Maurice Ravel made pieces called Mélodies hébraïques for violin and piano. Max Bruch arranged a Jewish prayer called Kol Nidrei for cello and orchestra. Sergei Prokofiev wrote Overture on Hebrew Themes using traditional Jewish songs. Dmitri Shostakovich also used Jewish music in some of his works, like the song cycle From Jewish Folk Poetry and his 13th symphony named Babi Yar.
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