THE NEW SSUE OF MUSICA JUDAICA
As we celebrate the holidays, the new issue of Musica Judaica (Volume 20, pictured here) rolls off the press.
Included in this volume are articles on Cantor Abraham Baer and the Gothenburg Synagogue (his influential Baal T'fillah is on the cover); a very important inventory of Shoah songbooks; memorial tributes to singer-songwriter Debbie Friedman, Yiddish archivist Chana Mlotek, and past ASJM president, composer Jack Gottlieb. Also there are two interesting articles about doing field research as a participant as well as an observer. Musica Judaica is Included as a part of membership dues in the American Society for Jewish Music for 2014-15. MEMBERSHIP FOR 2014-15Your membership dues are an essential part of the funding that allows the American Society for Jewish Music to continue to operate. Membership dues support the annual Chanukah Concert and our contemporary concert Music in Our Time, among others during the season. The sessions of the Jewish Music Forum, both at home and "On the Road" are also supported by dues from members. And, importantly, the information and access we provide without charge to the St. Petersburg Score Collection, the Charlie Bernhaut Collection of Jewish and Cantorial Recordings, as well as a host of other activities and services which help keep Jewish music alive. You can join the American Society for Jewish Music or to renew your membership online, or download the membership form and mail it in.
Amnon Shiloah z" - Pioneering MusicologistDear Members and Friends: I regret to announce that Amnon Shiloah, a pioneering musicologist in the field of Arab music, as well as in Jewish musical traditions and the music in Israel, died recently and was buried in Israel. He was one of the greats: a prolific researcher and scholar, with literally hundreds of publications, many honors and awards. Professor Shiloah was also a great mentor and shared his knowledge and talents with many in the field. One of those, Dr. Amy Horowitz (Ohio State and Indiana Universities) who worked with him in several different capacities, writes the following: "Amnon Shiloah’s voluminous writings and media productions already resonate with future generations. He inhabited multiple identities and languages, Arabic, Hebrew, Spanish, English and French among them. I am grateful for his masterful presentations of Muslim and Jewish (Jerusalemite) liturgical practitioners at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival Sacred Sounds Program (1998), his guidance both on a radio series featuring Israeli and Palestinian artists (1985) and doctoral fieldwork (Mediterranean Israeli music, 1993) for which he served as a Lady Davis Fellowship advisor at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. His legacy as a cultural bridge has yet to be fully explored." Further information and a complete biography can be found on the following link:http://web.nli.org.il/sites/NLI/English/music/news/Pages/amnon-shiloah.aspx Sincerely, Michael Leavitt President American Society for Jewish Music / Center for Jewish History / 15 West 16th Street / New York, NY 10011
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Site last updated September 30, 2014
Site last updated September 30, 2014