A Blast from the Past
Klezmer music finds new life in
America in the late 1900s.
By Marsha Bryan Edelman
Excerpted with
permission from Discovering Jewish Music
(Jewish Publication Society).
Among the most exciting "new" developments
in modern Jewish music has been the late 20th-century rediscovery of klezmer,
folk music of the itinerant European Jewish musicians that traveled with them
on their journey to the New World. Aswith Yiddish theater and other
aspects of Ashkenazic culture dependent upon links to the "old
country," klezmer's popularity faded with the cessation of massive
immigration from Eastern Europe and the increasing socialization--and
assimilation--of America's Jews.
By the late 1960s, klezmer had become a
distant memory, a relic of another era, stored on 78 RPM recordings in attics
and basements of Jewish homes but replaced at weddings and other communal
functions by the music of Israel and popular American repertoire. The children
of the aging klezmorim [klezmer
musicians] turned to American dance bands, classical music or,
ironically, the folk repertory of America's other ethnic communities. Young
Jews flocked to Irish music, jazz, and American folk song.
Simple Question Leads to Klezmer Revival
But in 1973, while exploring the string band music
of Appalachia, Henry Sapoznik was asked whether Jews had their own music. With
this simple question, this son of a European-born cantor, a deliberate refugee
from the Jewish music of his Lubavitch yeshivah [school] and the Catskill
hotels where his family spent Passover vacations, now turned back to his own
traditions. Beginning with a cache of old records at New York's YIVO Institute
for Jewish Research, Sapoznik unearthed the vestiges of European klezmer music,
already reinterpreted and transformed by American recording technology.
Sapoznik's enthusiasm for his own music, which he
saw now with different eyes, led him to additional research into klezmer music,
funded by U.S. government grants. He met elderly Jews who had played in the
klezmer ensembles of the 1920s and on some of the first klezmer recordings by
companies like Columbia and RCA Victor. By 1979, Sapoznik had formed Kapelye to
play a concert in Providence, Rhode Island. In 1981 the group, enhanced by
clarinetist Andy Statman, Sapoznik's own cantor father, and others, formed Der
Yiddisher Caravan, a national touring show that performed cantorial selections,
Yiddish theater songs, and klezmer music in concert venues across the United
States. Coincidentally, others had also begun to delve into klezmer music.
Clarinetist Giora Feidman, formerly of the Israel
Philharmonic Orchestra, popularized klezmer in Israel and in appearances in
America. Andy Statman and ethnomusicologist Zev Feldman had staged a
retrospective of the work of veteran European-American klezmer musician Dave
Tarras (1897-1989) in 1978. Hankus Netsky, a jazz music instructor at the New
England Conservatory of Music, had rediscovered the klezmer music of his
trumpeter uncle Sol Katz in a Philadelphia basement. Netsky enthusiastically
recreated the big band sound of the early American klezmer recordings with his
students and colleagues, forming the Klezmer Conservatory Band.
The rebirth of klezmer continued on an upward
trajectory of isolated but increasingly important events involving Henry
Sapoznik and his growing network of colleagues. Sapoznik's research resulted in
Folkways Music's retrospective reissue of some classic 78 RPM recordings, Klezmer
Music: 1910-1942.
In 1982, Sapoznik became the director of the Max and
Frieda Weinstein Archives of Sound Recording at YIVO. That summer, his band
Kapelye appeared in the Hollywood version of Chaim Potok's The Chosen and
issued their first album. In 1983 Sapoznik and Andy Statman were joined by Pete
Sokolow and other top New York Jewish and jazz musicians, performing their show
Klezmer Meets Jazz at New York's Jewish Museum and at Joseph Papp's
Public Theater. Pete Sokolow used the arrangements he wrote for that show to
form his Original Klezmer Jazz Band, which issued its first recording in 1984,
the same year in which a group calling itself The Klezmorim played Carnegie
Hall and the Klezmer Conservatory Band scored a huge success appearing on
Garrison Keillor's A Prairie Home Companion, broadcast on National
Public Radio stations across the country.
Back to Europe
Kapelye became the first klezmer band to tour
Europe, appearing in Britain, France, Switzerland, Belgium, and Germany (playing
one of its best-received concerts in a Berlin mansion that had been used as a
Gestapo headquarters during the Second World War). Klezmer had returned to its
roots, completing a cycle and launching a rebirth whose popularity in Europe
continues unabated--though largely among non-Jewish audiences and with newly
formed bands including or entirely comprised of non-Jewish players.
Meanwhile, across America, klezmer bands flourished
wherever there were Jews: in Chicago and Philadelphia and San Francisco; but
also in Boulder, Colorado; Montpelier, Vermont; and New Orleans, Louisiana.
Klezmer appealed to a wide cross-section of audiences: gray-haired grandparents
who remembered the klezmer bands of their distant youth; their grandchildren
for whom Yiddish culture had no special appeal; and the friends of those
grandchildren who came from the ethnic communities in whose music the Jewish
musicians of the 1960s had once sought refuge, and who now welcomed a reborn
tradition into their midst.
Klezmer as an Amalgamation of Cultures
From its inception in Europe, klezmer had always
reflected a unique amalgamation of the music of the Jewish community with the
music of the surrounding culture. Klezmorimplaying at Jewish
celebrations and at non-Jewish festivities alike had contributed to a
cross-pollination between Jewish and gentile cultures, enriching both. Like the
Hasidic community, which eagerly embraced the potential of any melody to bring
greater glory to the Creator, klezmer musicians adapted a wide variety of tunes
to serve their purposes. This exchange continued in America, with Jewish
musicians borrowing jazz and other styles, and crossing over, adapting Jewish
tunes to the diverse marketplace of American cultural ideas. Ziggy Elman (nee
Henry Finkleman, 1914-1968) turned the "Odessa Bulgar" into the swing
era's "The Angels Sing," while "Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen" by
Sholom Secunda (1894-1974) was equally successful (on both sides of the
Atlantic) as a Yiddish-language favorite and as an American pop success sung by
the Andrews Sisters (albeit with English lyrics).
Klezmer music, whether in Europe or in America,
at the turn of the 20th century or the 21st or the 18th, has done what Jewish
music has done since it was born in the Middle East at the beginning of
recorded time: It has adapted the music of the larger, surrounding culture.
What it has never done, however, is assimilate completely. Rather, klezmer
music in particular, and Jewish music as a whole (as the Jews who created it),
consciously and subconsciously borrowed liberally but never sacrificed its
Jewish sensibility. Jewish values, the internal rhythms of Jewish languages,
the musical motives of the synagogue and the schoolhouse, have all enabled
Jewish music to retain a unique cast that separates it from that of the
surrounding community.
The contemporary era, with its technological
immediacy and the shrinking of the global village, has created challenges that
Jewish musical tradition never faced in previous generations. Moreover, the
availability of musical notation and easy recording techniques have made
possible the exchange of melodies between unlikely partners--and the
near-instant incorporation of these tunes into otherwise
"traditional" settings. Witnesses who know the source of such
"borrowed" materials often rail at the encroachment of these foreign
influences, and the conservators of Jewish music traditions (Oriental,
Sephardic, and Ashkenazic) author long discourses on the deterioration of their
heritage and the unhappy cultural future awaiting the next generation.
But while the challenges awaiting that next generation may be
unprecedented, the very factors that have precipitated this 21st-century crisis
of identity have also made possible the preservation of important aspects of
Jewish musical history. Ethnomusicologists have studied the sounds of Jewish
musical communities around the world. Books of this music and recordings of
these songs have created a permanent record of the sounds of Jewish musical
tradition. As long as there are people who call themselves "Jews"
there will continue to be Jewish music. While it will continue to evolve and
emerge as something not quite like its past legacy, those who respect the
continuity of the Jewish cultural heritage, in all its diversity, will no doubt
find a way to keep it within the sounds of Jewish memory and practice--as Jews
have always done.
Marsha Bryan Edelman is professor of music and education at Gratz
College. She also serves as director of the Tyson Music Department and
coordinates the college's academic programs in Jewish music.
Copyright 2003 by Marsha Bryan Edelman