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  • ZLB (Berlin)  (5)
  • English  (5)
  • Dutch
  • New York, NY
  • Oxford : Oxford University Press
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  • English  (5)
  • Dutch
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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    Oxford : Oxford University Press
    ISBN: 9780190064433
    Language: English
    Pages: 331 Seiten , Illustrationen , 23,5 cm
    Year of publication: 2021
    Keywords: Berlin ; Geschichte 2013-2014 ; Judentum ; Stadtleben ; Klezmer ; Berlin ; Judentum ; Stadtleben ; Klezmer ; Berlin ; Klezmer ; Geschichte 2013-2014
    Abstract: How can a traditional music with little apparent historical connection to Berlin become a way of hearing and making sense of the bustling German capital in the twenty-first century? In Sounding Jewish in Berlin, author Phil Alexander explores the dialogue between the city's contemporary klezmer scene and the street-level creativity that has become a hallmark of Berlin's decidedly modern urbanity and cosmopolitanism. By tracing how klezmer music engages with the spaces and symbolic meanings of the city, Alexander sheds light on how this Eastern European Jewish folk music has become not just a product but also a producer of Berlin. This engaging study of Berlin's dynamic Yiddish music scene brings together ethnomusicology, cultural studies, and urban geography to evoke the sounds, atmospheres, and performance spaces through which klezmer musicians have built a lively set of musical networks in the city. Transcending a restrictive framework that considers this music solely in the context of troubled German-Jewish history and notions of guilt and absence, Alexander shows how Berlin's current klezmer community a diverse group of Jewish and non-Jewish performers imaginatively blend the genre's traditional musical language with characteristically local tones to forge an adaptable and distinctively twenty-first-century version of klezmer. Ultimately, the music's vital presence in Berlin is powerful evidence that if traditional music is to remain audible amid the noise of the urban, it must become a meaningful part of that noise.
    Abstract: How can a traditional music with little apparent historical connection to Berlin become a way of hearing and making sense of the bustling German capital in the twenty-first century? In Sounding Jewish in Berlin, author Phil Alexander explores the dialogue between the city's contemporary klezmer scene and the street-level creativity that has become a hallmark of Berlin's decidedly modern urbanity and cosmopolitanism. By tracing how klezmer music engages withthe spaces and symbolic meanings of the city, Alexander sheds light on how this Eastern European Jewish folk music has become not just a product but also a producer of Berlin.This engaging study of Berlin's dynamic Yiddish music scene brings together ethnomusicology, cultural studies, and urban geography to evoke the sounds, atmospheres, and performance spaces through which klezmer musicians have built a lively set of musical networks in the city. Transcending a restrictive framework that considers this music solely in the context of troubled German-Jewish history and notions of guilt and absence, Alexander shows how Berlin's current klezmer community-adiverse group of Jewish and non-Jewish performers-imaginatively blend the genre's traditional musical language with characteristically local tones to forge an adaptable and distinctively twenty-first-century version of klezmer. Ultimately, the music's vital presence in Berlin is powerful evidence that iftraditional music is to remain audible amid the noise of the urban, it must become a meaningful part of that noise.
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9780197532973
    Language: English
    Pages: 644 Seiten , 23,5 cm
    Year of publication: 2021
    Keywords: Deutschland ; Geschichte 1945-1989 ; Musik ; Musiker ; Juden ; Musikleben ; Deutschland ; Musik ; Geschichte 1945-1989 ; Deutschland ; Musiker ; Juden ; Musikleben ; Geschichte 1945-1989
    Abstract: By the end of the Second World War, Germany was in ruins and its Jewish population so gravely diminished that a rich cultural life seemed unthinkable. And yet, as surviving Jews returned from hiding, the camps, and their exiles abroad, so did their music. Transcending Dystopia tells the story of the remarkable revival of Jewish musical activity that developed in postwar Germany against all odds. Verfasser Tina Fruhauf provides a kaleidoscopic panorama of musical practices in worship and social life across the country to illuminate how music contributed to transitions and transformations within and beyond Jewish communities in the aftermath of the Holocaust. Drawing on newly unearthed sources from archives and private collections, this book covers a wide spectrum of musical activity - from its role in commemorations and community events to synagogue concerts and its presence on the radio - across the divided Germany until the Fall of the Wall in 1989. Fruhauf's use of mobility as a conceptual framework reveals the myriad ways in which the reemergence of Jewish music in Germany was shaped by cultural transfer and exchange that often relied on the circulation of musicians, their ideas, and practices within and between communities. By illuminating the centrality of mobility to Jewish experiences and highlighting how postwar Jewish musical practices in Germany were defined by politics that reached across national borders to the United States and Israel, this pioneering study makes a major contribution to our understanding of Jewish life and culture in a transnational context.
    Note: Englisch
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 24 Seiten , 23 cm
    Year of publication: 2014
    Series Statement: The Leo Baeck memorial lecture 56
    Series Statement: The Leo Baeck memorial lecture
    DDC: 950
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 24 Seiten , 23 cm
    Year of publication: 2010
    Series Statement: The Leo Baeck memorial lecture 53
    Series Statement: The Leo Baeck memorial lecture
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  • 5
    Book
    Book
    New York, NY | Berlin : Leo Baeck Inst.
    Language: English
    Pages: 16 Seiten , 23 cm
    Year of publication: 2009
    Series Statement: The Leo Baeck memorial lecture 52
    Series Statement: The Leo Baeck memorial lecture
    Keywords: ʿAmiḥai, Yehudah ; ʿAmiḥai, Yehudah
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