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Re[4]: FW: [2ND-GEN:7773] Re: Perry Como
- From: richard_wolpoe <richard_wolpoe...>
- Subject: Re[4]: FW: [2ND-GEN:7773] Re: Perry Como
- Date: Tue 15 Dec 1998 21.37 (GMT)
We all can relate to the universal spiritual motifs that stir our collective
hearts. Of course the specifics get to be very different. without resurrecting
the haTikvo thread, rembmer that Hatikvo stirs Jewish hearts one way and its
cousin the Moldau stirs Bohemiam hearts another way.
I'd be interested in an anthropological study that let neutral pepole who have
no prvious exposure to those respective pieces, have a listen and find out how
they feel.
Frelichn Chanukko
Rich Wolpoe
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Subject: RE: Re[2]: FW: [2ND-GEN:7773] Re: Perry Como
Author: <jewish-music (at) shamash(dot)org> at Tcpgate
Date: 12/15/98 2:03 PM
>My own expereicne and the confidential confessions of others has confirmed that
>many of us are stirred by sacred/liturgical music of all stripes....
>By analogy, one can like the
>MELODIES and not the lyrics to a lot of Christian favorites (Schubert's Ave
>Maria comes to mind).
Yes, I meant the song "Ave Maria" not "Silent Night", but only when Luciano sing
it. It's totally flat or awful if anyone else sings it, no matter how sonorous
he voice. But when he sings it, it's just magical. So, I guess it isn't jus
the melody itself, in my case.
>Lewandowski's vuv'tseil kenofecha has a bar or 2 that is an unmistakable
>adaptation of Silent Night's "Holy infant ..." phrase.
You should hear Jack Gottlieb's lecture on this. He takes Jewish music and
showselements from classical musicians and then does the reverse with non-Jewish
music.Is it one influencing the other or just an accident? One's response is
quite often "he's gotta be right", but who really knows. There are some
winning combina ons in the phrasing of Western music.
Reyzl
00 PM