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Channukah: Festival of Lights
Ot Azoj Klezmerband, Merovitz
Channukah: Festival of Lights
Genres: Folk, International Music, Special Interest, Pop, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (20) - Disc #1

Festive music in a minor key: this is how Ot Azoj Klezmerband describes the traditional Yiddish music from Eastern Europe...an interesting mix of tradition and innovation, featuring Canadian singer Allan Merovitz.

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Ot Azoj Klezmerband, Merovitz
Title: Channukah: Festival of Lights
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Oreade Music
Release Date: 9/7/1999
Genres: Folk, International Music, Special Interest, Pop, Classical
Styles: Jewish & Yiddish, Europe, Continental Europe, Holiday & Wedding, Opera & Classical Vocal
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 723723593528, 8711913586520

Synopsis

Album Description
Festive music in a minor key: this is how Ot Azoj Klezmerband describes the traditional Yiddish music from Eastern Europe...an interesting mix of tradition and innovation, featuring Canadian singer Allan Merovitz.
 

CD Reviews

Go beyond the Dreidle Song for some GREAT Channukah music!
Rabbi Yonassan Gershom | Minnesota, USA | 09/12/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I received this CD as a Wish List gift (Thank you, Oh loyal reader of my reviews!) and I absolutely love it. There are traditional Chanukkah songs here that I've never heard anywhere else, plus some original compositions. If you thought that "Maoz Tzur" and the "Dreidel Song" were all there is to Chanukkah music, then you simply must hear this album! In the days of the European stetl (Jewish village), bands of klezmer musicians would go from house to house, playing music while the Chanukkah candles burned brightly into the long winter nights. This album captures that old-time spirit perfectly. There are lively dances, peppy songs, and slow, contemplative vocal pieces called "Doinas," which might strike some Western listeners as sad because they're sung in a minor key. Not so. "Festival music in a minor key" is how Ot Azoi describes their music. The Doinas are contemplative, inward-looking vocal improvisations, using meaningless syllables to express that which cannot be said in words. Think of the human voice as a jazz trumpet and you are on your way to grokking this type of Jewish music. The words, of course, are in Yiddish and Hebrew. One weakness of this album is that the insert doesn't include all the words to all the songs (although it does translate some of them.) But even if you don't know these languages, you'll catch the spirit. And you'll probably recognize the words to "Shalom Aleichem" (Peace be upon you), a song usually associated with the Sabbath, but also appropriate here in a soul-filled rendition that starts out slowly, then bursts into a joyous dance acceompanied by drums and other percussion. I especially like band #15, "a Lid fun Chanukkah" (Song for Chanukkah) which says, "Lomir tantzen, lomir zingen -- let us dance, let us sing!" Need I say more?"
Who is this Barenholtz guy?
Rabbi Yonassan Gershom | 10/26/1999
(5 out of 5 stars)

"So I'm online browsing the latest cd's, and I see everyone writing fantastic reviews about this song by Elan Barenholtz. I had to hear for myself. Well let me tell you -- UNBELIEVABLE!!! He's got a great voice, and the music really sinks in! Buy this one."
A festival it is
Rabbi Yonassan Gershom | 09/28/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Ot Azoj keeps growing! When will they play in america? A good band like this shoudn't be kept for the europeans only!
This cd is a nice mixture between old and new, happy and sad.
It's the best chanukah cd I ever heard!
I'm very curious about their next cd. I saw it on their website... It's called Klezmer fon Kishinev. Should be interesting. I hope Amazon will have it soon!
Ot Azoj keep up the good work!Ben Levi"