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Steve Greenman & Pete Rushefsky Concert: Cleveland March 7
- From: Pete Rushefsky <klezbanjo...>
- Subject: Steve Greenman & Pete Rushefsky Concert: Cleveland March 7
- Date: Mon 01 Mar 2004 21.16 (GMT)
Hi friends, in addition to our concert in Ithaca, NY on Thursday, March 4 (8:15
PM Ford Hall-- Whalen Center @ Ithaca College), here's some info about a
Cleveland, OH show on March 7...
The Yiddish Vinkl Club
proudly presents
"Di Tsvey" ("The Duo")
World-renowned klezmer violinist Steven Greenman and tsimbl (cimbalom /
hammered dulcimer) player Pete Rushefsky will perform a program of original and
rarely heard tradtional klezmer pieces.
The concert will include some of Steven's orginal Klezmer compositions to be
heard soon on his upcoming recording "The Dream of Stempenyu."
When: Sunday, March 7th, 2004 at 7:30pm
Where: Workmen's Circle Center
1980 South Green Rd.
South Euclid, OH 44121
$1.00 for Vinkl Club members--$3.00 for Non-Club members
Reservations are required - Call (216)381-4515
I hope you can attend this special concert. Any questions please feel free to
call me at (216)382-5644 or email: Greenfidl (at) core(dot)com(dot)
Sincerely,
Steven Greenman
Steven Greenman, Violinist: Recognized internationally as one of the finest
practitioners of traditional East European Jewish Klezmer violin, Steven
Greenman is a seasoned performer of "Klezmer" music as well as a serious
composer of traditional Klezmer music, a teacher, musical arranger and
lecturer. His current project, "The Dream of Stempenyu" involves a CD recording
of his own original Jewish and Klezmer violin compositions, a series of
concerts of the music and a future publication of the material. One of the
first American born klezmer violinists to create a program and performance
style based entirely on the repertoire of European Klezmer violin music, Steven
co-founded the Khevrisa ensemble together with the cimbalist, Walter Zev
Feldman in 1998. Steven has performed internationally with Khevrisa and other
notable klezmer ensembles such as the Klezmatics, Budowitz, the Flying Bulgar
Klezmer Band and Kapelye. His own ensemble, the Steven Greenman Klezmer
Ensemble is dedicated
to performing his own compositions and the transitional Jewish/Moldavian
Klezmer repertoire.
As a teacher of Klezmer music Steven received a grant to be the first recipient
of the Louis E. Emsheimer Memorial Artist in Residence Program in Cleveland,
Ohio (2002) for which he lead Klezmer workshops for classical string players
and lectured on Klezmer music. He has taught Klezmer violin and led string
ensembles at the KlezKanada festival, Living Traditions? KlezKamp, and KlezFest
London. Working with educators Mitchell Korn and Amy McClellan of the Cleveland
Orchestra educational department?s "Learning Through Music" program Steven was
selected as a "Teaching Artist" and developed a children?s program combining
story telling and klezmer music.
Steven has collaborated with New York dancer/choreographer David Dorfman and
the Cleveland State Dance ensemble as musical director in Dorfman?s "Moving
Histories", a modern dance piece dealing with Jewish identity, and performed
with members of the Klezmatics in their 1997 performance of Tony Kushner?s
adaptation of S. Ansky?s "Dybbuk." Steven has lectured and performed at the
Jewish Culture Festival in Krakow, Poland and has been a regular performer with
various ensembles at Toronto?s Ashkenaz-A Festival of New Yiddish Culture.
In addition to his involvement with Klezmer music Steven is an accomplished
performer of urban Gypsy violin styles, in particular, Hungarian "Nota",
Romanian "Lautari" music and Slovak folk music. Steven has devoted his life to
the study of these styles learning East-European violin style and ornamentation
from professional Gypsy and folk musicians from Slovakia, Romania, the Ukraine
and Hungary in addition to transcribing and arranging hundreds of tunes. As a
concert soloist, Steven has been a regular guest soloist with the Cleveland
Pops Orchestra performing his own arrangements of traditional East European
Gypsy violin music. Steven will be featured on a forthcoming CD of urban
Romanian Gypsy violin music together with the cimbalist, Alexander Fedoriouk.
As a classical violinist Steven received both his Bachelor of Music and Master
of Music degrees in Violin Performance from the Cleveland Institute of Music
studying with Linda Sharon Cerone, Dr. Eugene Gratovich and the late
Bernhard Goldshmidt. Steven has also performed as a member of the Canton and
Akron Symphony Orchestras and has participated in the National Repertory
Orchestra, the National Orchestral Institute and the American Institute of
Musical Studies in Graz, Austria.
Steven is lead performer, producer and the composer of the music of his
upcoming Klezmer violin CD project, "The Dream of Stempenyu". Together with
Walter Zev Feldman, Steven co-produced and is featured on the recording
Khevrisa-European Klezmer Music on the Smithsonian Folkways label. Steven is
also featured on the following recordings: Budowitz? "Mother Tongue"; as
violinist and musical producer/arranger with Yiddish vocalist Lori Cahan-Simon
with "Songs My Bubbe Should Have Taught Me" (Vol. 1) and lead violinist on
"Vessel of Song-The Music of Mikhl Gelbart". In addition Steven has recorded
with Alicia Svigals and with "The Flying Bulgar Klezmer Band".
Pete Rushefsky (tsimbl) is a leading revivalist of the tsimbl, or Jewish
hammered dulcimer. He performs with some of the finest practitioners of
traditional Yiddish and klezmer music including Steven Greenman, Rebecca
Kaplan, Joel Rubin and Alicia Svigals. He won much critical acclaim for his CD
with violinist Elie Rosenblatt entitled "Tsimbl un Fidl: Klezmer Music for
Hammered Dulcimer & Violin" (Hatikvah Music) and he appears with Michael Alpert
and Deborah Strauss on Yiddish poet/songwriter Beyle Schaechter-Gottesman's CD
"Af di gasn fun der shtot - On the Streets of the City" (Yiddishland Records).
His upcoming Yiddishland Records release with Rebecca Kaplan is entitled "Oyf
di vegelekh / On the Paths: Yiddish Songs with Tsimbl." Pete is also the
author of a pioneering instructional book on adapting the American 5-string
banjo for klezmer.
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