Jewish Musical Traditions

Front Cover
Wayne State University Press, 1995 - 274 pages

This is the first English-language volume to consider oral music of Jewish communities in a sociocultural context.

Jewish Musical Traditions is the first English-language volume to consider oral music of Jewish communities in a sociocultural context. Amnon Shiloah, the world's leading authority on the Arab and Jewish musical traditions, tells a musical story voiced the world over by men and women in synagogues and homes, mirroring the life of an ancient
people exiled from its land. The story began in Biblical times and encompasses two thousand years, during which a widely dispersed people have tried to preserve their cultural values in complex and horrific situations.
Such an excursion into the world of sounds resonating from many traditions presents problems. Shiloah faced questions concerning the impact that long-term
exposure to strange local musical cultures may have had on the preservation of ancient traditions the Jews took with them as they moved from place to place. The dearth of musical documentation on which to base definitive argumentation further complicates the picture.

To cope with these diverse problems, the author considers the musical heritage as only one element in the value system informing an individual's world outlook and perception of the destiny of the Jewish people. Hence, he discusses the manner in which this musical heritage meshes with the complex web of Jewish history by way of central themes such as the relation of music to religion, music
and the world of the Kabbalah, and music in communal life. Shiloah considers technical and theoretical approaches, as well as art music, folk music, and performance practices of poets, vocalists, instrumentalists, and dancers.

From inside the book

Contents

Preface
11
Identity and Character of Jewish Music
17
Problems of Methodology in the Study of Jewish Music
35
Music and Religion
65
Cantillation
87
The Piyyut as a Factor in the Development of Synagogal Music
111
Music in the World of the Mystic
131
NonSynagogal MusicBetween Sacred and Secular
157
Folk Creativity and Performance Practice
181
The Dance
209
Looking Backward and Forward
223
Epilogue
241
Bibliography
257
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About the author (1995)

Amnon Shiloah is the author of the monumental volume The Theory of Music in Arabic Writings, The Musical Subjects in the Zohar, The jewish-Iraqi Musical Tradition, and a four-volume set in Hebrew on the musical traditions of Jewish communities. Currently a professor of musicology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he earned his Ph.D. from the Sorbonne.

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