A program produced by Cobie Ivens, every 3rd Sunday of the month.
Today with Klezmer and Ladino from South-America, Europe, North-Africa and the Middle-East.
1- César Lerner & Marcelo Moguilevsky.
Born to Russian and Polish grandparents who emigrated to Argentina at the beginning of the century, they have developed their own language based on improvisation since 1996, combining musical elements from Argentine folk music, jazz, contemporary music and tango. Original instrumental compositions form their repertoire: flutes, piano, African balafon, hang, gongs, duduk, ney, clarinet, accordion, harmonica, mouth harps, bass drum and vocals.
CD. Musica klezmer – César Lerner & Marcelo Moguilevsky.
LABEL: Discmedi (2004), code: DM 399-02. Video
2- Yankele.
Five musicians make up the French Klezmer group Yankele: a guitarist, a double bassist, an accordionist, a violinist and a clarinetist. This album contains four traditional Klezmer pieces of varying difficulty. The arrangements proposed to you were created by the Yankele group and can be interpreted by ‘interchangeable’ ensembles such as piano, with three violins, clarinet quartet, flutes, quintet consisting of a guitar; accordion, string bass, etc.
CD. L’esprit du klezmer – Yankele.
LABEL: Buda Musique (2001), code: 1983142. Video
3- The best treasures of Judeo-Arabic song.
This music has left its mark on the soul of North African Jews. It still resonates in the hearts, in the uprooted souls of the emigrants in Israel, it resounds in their music, in their songs, in their folklore and in their rituals. As Haïm Zafrani, a Moroccan Jewish writer based in Israel, put it, the culture he refers to is the culture that Jews and Muslims have shared, nurtured and communally maintained for more than ten centuries.
CD. Le meilleur des trésors de la chanson judéo-arabe.
LABEL: Buda Musique (2012), code: 860222. Video
Producer:
Cobie Ivens
Thanks to: