Overview:
Jewish Music in America
American Jews have always
walked a fine line between retaining a distinctive national identity and
assimilating into the broader culture. Definitions of American Jewish music
reflect this delicate balance: The category "American Jewish music"
may constitute any music written in America by Jews; music of a particularly
religious nature composed for some religious purpose; music that functions as a
culturally defining artifact; or some combination of all these.
The contribution of Jews to the production of
"mainstream" music in America is of great significance. Broadway
singer Al Jolson became a great success in the 1920s; George Gershwin trained
as a classical composer and continued to write works in the classical idiom
even as he collaborated with his brother Ira in writing some of Broadway's most
memorable and influential music. The Broadway musical Showboat (1927) was written by Jewish composer Jerome Kern, and
Americans of all backgrounds adopted it as a nationally defining story, one
that dealt with the ever-intensifying issues of race relations and the search
for a common American identity.
The contributions of Benny Goodman, Ziggy Elman, and Artie
Shaw to the development of the originally African-American idioms of jazz and
big band music worked in tandem with the innovations of non-Jewish musicians to
develop a truly "American" sound. Simon and Garfunkel made marked
contributions to the popularization of American folk music, and Jewish artists
like Barbra Streisand and Mel Brooks have helped to shape the face of musical
theater and film.
Jewish composers were also essential in defining the sound
of American classical music. The most famous of Aaron Copland's music fuses the
sounds of 19th- and early 20th-century American folk music with the symphonic
textures of Western art music. Leonard Bernstein was a formidable presence
throughout the world of orchestral music and Broadway, as composer and
conductor; he brought together various religious and musical elements when, for
example, he set both Latin and Hebrew sacred texts in his "Chichester
Psalms."
These expressions of secular music, though, only scratch the
surface of the American Jewish artistic experience. Beginning with the early
waves of immigration to the United States at the turn of the 20th century, Jews
imported and further developed distinct musical sounds, identified as a
cultural manifestation of life in the old country and in the tenements of New
York. Klezmer, from the Hebrew words kli
zemer ("vessel of song"), originated in the Pale of Settlement,
the junction of the Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, and Russian empires, and it
arrived in America with the earliest immigrants.
The sounds of klezmer were easily adapted to the Yiddish
theater, imported to New York's Lower East Side from Europe. This counterpart
of Broadway shows developed as a cultural expression of and for the Jewish
community. As early as the mid-1920s, Yiddish radio stations broadcasted
musical programs for their Jewish listeners.
Second-generation American Jews reacted against their
parents' insulated attitudes, and the popularity of klezmer and Yiddish music
went into remission. The last few decades, however, have seen a revival of this
music. Beginning with the klezmorim (klezmer musicians) of the
mid-1970s, the klezmer revival represents a return to tradition and a search
for spirituality. Popular figures like Andy Statman have allowed the klezmer
movement to expand, to include new instruments and sounds suited to modern
audiences.
At the same time, American Jewish music has seen the birth
of new genres. As Jews have become more comfortable asserting their religious
and cultural identity, Jewish musicians have adopted influences of American
folk and rock music. The work of artists like Debbie Friedman uses largely
acoustic folk sounds infused with Jewish lyrics and ideas. The band Safam (Hebrew for "moustache")
employs sounds as diverse as cantorial music and popular rock to convey
messages of political and religious import. Shlock Rock adapts extant popular
songs by artists from Bruce Springsteen to the Beatles, remaking them with
lyrics on Jewish themes.
Contemporary Jewish music often draws on and overlaps with
elements of liturgy, both in melody and in text. The work of Shlomo Carlebach,
heavily influenced by folk music, is used both inside and outside the context
of ritual. And students on college campuses have adapted the secular genre of a cappella and glee club song for music
with Jewish words and themes.