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This setting for Psalm 92 is one example of the innovative music composed by Louis Lewandowski, Samuel Naumbourg, and Salomon Sulzer (1804–1890) for the synagogues of the new Reform movement. Their…
Contributor:
Louis Lewandowski
Places:
Berlin, Germany
Date:
1876
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In the city of Warsaw such a long time ago
Two hundred children stand lined row on row
With their freshly washed faces and freshly washed clothes
The children of Poland who never grow old
In the…
Contributor:
Si Kahn
Places:
Charlotte, United States of America
Date:
1985
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Salamone de Rossi (1570–1630), composer, singer, violinist, and musician in the Gonzaga court in Mantua, is best known for his introduction of polyphony into synagogue music. Composer Samuel Naumbourg…
Contributor:
Samuel Naumbourg, Salamone de Rossi
Places:
Paris, France
Date:
1876
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The first edition of Baal T’fillah was published in 1871. A compendium of over 1,500 Jewish traditional melodies, according to the traditions of German, Polish, and Portuguese (Sephardic) Jews, the…
Contributor:
Abraham Baer
Places:
Gothenburg, United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway (Göteborg, Sweden)
Date:
1877
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In the first place, it behoves us to fight the opinion that the regeneration of the service can be achieved only by a complete break with the past, by abolishing all traditional and inherited…
Contributor:
Salomon Sulzer
Places:
Vienna, Austro-Hungarian Empire (Vienna, Austria)
Date:
1876
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The book’s name: This book [Song of Songs] is called a “song,” a noun bearing several meanings. First, it denotes music, as in the verse: all the daughters of song (Ecclesiastes 12:4), which means…
Contributor:
Yoḥanan Alemanno
Places:
Date:
ca. 1500