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Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer
Arc Magazine
4 episodes
8 months ago
For decades, klezmer musicians have kept traditional Jewish music alive despite war, genocide, and erasure. They’ve done so by playing a small handful of surviving songs again and again. Many more songs—a trove of tunes with the potential to redefine the genre—have sat just out of reach, in a former Soviet archive. This music was unseen, unheard, unknown. But now, newly rescued, it’s transforming the klezmer world, the people who work in it, and our picture of 20th-century Jewish life in a destabilized Europe. Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer tells the story of that music. From ARC Magazine, a publication of the Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis.
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History
Religion & Spirituality
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All content for Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer is the property of Arc Magazine and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
For decades, klezmer musicians have kept traditional Jewish music alive despite war, genocide, and erasure. They’ve done so by playing a small handful of surviving songs again and again. Many more songs—a trove of tunes with the potential to redefine the genre—have sat just out of reach, in a former Soviet archive. This music was unseen, unheard, unknown. But now, newly rescued, it’s transforming the klezmer world, the people who work in it, and our picture of 20th-century Jewish life in a destabilized Europe. Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer tells the story of that music. From ARC Magazine, a publication of the Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis.
Show more...
History
Religion & Spirituality
Episodes (4/4)
Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer
3. Dancing in a Jewish Way
Klezmer activist Christina Crowder finds something personal in the music she helped return to the klezmer community. Plus, a klezmer concert in a church. From Arc magazine and Washington University in St. Louis. Image from the Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine.
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8 months ago
17 minutes 22 seconds

Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer
2. Klezmerland
A fateful Tokyo subway ride delivers hundreds of tunes to klezmerland, transforming the genre—and kugel etiquette. From Arc magazine and Washington University in St. Louis.  Image from the Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine.
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8 months ago
25 minutes 43 seconds

Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer
1. The Expedition
As Jewish Eastern Europe crumbles, ethnographer S. An-sky races to save klezmer music. His recordings and notebooks barely survive the 1900s, landing deep in a Soviet archive. This is the story of their rescue. From Arc magazine and Washington University in St. Louis. Image from the Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine.
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8 months ago
21 minutes 11 seconds

Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer
Introducing: "Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer"
From Arc magazine comes the story of a groundbreaking moment in klezmer music.  Show art by Giovanna Truong. 
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8 months ago
2 minutes 48 seconds

Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer
For decades, klezmer musicians have kept traditional Jewish music alive despite war, genocide, and erasure. They’ve done so by playing a small handful of surviving songs again and again. Many more songs—a trove of tunes with the potential to redefine the genre—have sat just out of reach, in a former Soviet archive. This music was unseen, unheard, unknown. But now, newly rescued, it’s transforming the klezmer world, the people who work in it, and our picture of 20th-century Jewish life in a destabilized Europe. Rescued: The Lost Treasures of Klezmer tells the story of that music. From ARC Magazine, a publication of the Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis.