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Perspectives on Jewish Music: Secular and Sacred (review)

Authors :
Joshua R. Jacobson
Source :
Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies. 29:224-226
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Project MUSE, 2011.

Abstract

Perspectives on Jewish Music: Secular and Sacred, edited by Jonathan Friedmann. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2009. 162 pp. $60.00. Jonathan Friedmann's Perspectives on Jewish Music is an anthology of five essays representing five very different perspectives. Each essay deals with the music of the Jewish people, and each betrays its own unique agenda. The five authors enjoy an uneasy coexistence between the covers and seemingly find common ground only in the index. Jeff Janeczko is an avowed diasporist, a polemicist espousing the cause of the cultures that Zionism attempted to displace. His essay focuses on Radical Jewish Culture, the title given to a series of more than one hundred recordings on John Zorns Tzadik label, Zorn describes the series as "Jewish music beyond klezmer: adventurous recordings bringing Jewish identity and culture into the twenty-first century." But Zorn's label and Janeczko's essay both seem to ignore the existence of other twenty-first century Jewish musical creativity. Janeczko shares with us his interviews with four of these composers, JewUa Eisenberg Ned Rothenberg Steven Bernstein, and Marc Ribot, all of whom are situated in the context of American popular music. Rothenberg states that his work's Jewishness arose unexpectedly during the compositional process, that his art comes from a sense of identity that he could not escape. Was he aware of similar sentiments a century earlier by arguably the greatest Jewish composer, Ernest Bloch? "I notice here and there themes that are without my willing it, for the greater part Jewish, . . . this impulse that has chosen me, who all my life have been a stranger to all that is Jewish" (Bloch, 1911). While Rothenberg and others claim to be "multicultural omnivores," there is a rejection of Jewish Orthodoxy, painting it glibly as "an easy path," revealing perhaps most vividly the author's lack of any deep exploration of traditional Judaism. And Ribot criticizes musicians who limit themselves to pre-war, Holocaustrelated, or Israeli themes. But by rejecting these three signifiers, is Ribot being just as limited? Mark Goodman's essay deals with the popularity of folk-rock music in the sixties and its influence on Jewish worship. Goodman has quite a few facts wrong in his essay. For example, Reform Judaism did not emerge in the late nineteenth century, and most cantors from the Golden Age of Hazzanut were not captured by the Nazis, as he asserts. Occasionally he paints with too wide a brush; he posits, for example, that all of the "older generation" were merely spectators in the worship service. There are some curious omissions - why does he omit Herbert Fromm from his list of the great American composers of Reform liturgical music in the period from 1930 until 1960? And why did Goodman decline to include Orthodox Judaism in his study? He would have found that his assertion that Orthodox Judaism still follows closely the centuries-old traditions of Judaism" doesn't always apply in the area of synagogue song, where traditional nusah has also been abandoned in favor of tune singing. The editor, Jonathan Friedmann, has contributed an essay entitled, "Humility, Prayer, and the Cantorial Ideal. …

Details

ISSN :
15345165
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2ac1212e6d27e32e01b61ee59c6270ff