Archive for the 'Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe' Category

April 12, 2007: 1:34 am: kfarPast Events, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe


Dror Yikra
Shkembah
Black Sheep

ESTA is a multi-ethnic band with innovative compositions and imaginative arrangements – deeply rooted in Israel’s diverse traditions. Esta’s band members are all first generation Israelis, raised on their parents’ musical heritage from Bulgaria, Iraq, Poland, Iran, Romania, Syria, Russia, and Turkey. Inspired also by the 1970s progressive rock, Esta’s music traverses myriad soundscapes – acoustic instruments dance with electric, a cappella vocals complement a symphony of sounds.

Founded in 1979 by Shlomo Deshet and Ori Beanstock, Esta has created a distinctive new sound, incorporating Jewish, Balkan, Middle Eastern, Mediterranean, African and Celtic genres into its own pan-global sound, propelled by Rock’s energy and Jazz’s musicianship. Esta is among a handful of visionary artists to fuse contemporary music with folkloric styles and sounds. World Fusion isn’t just a genre Esta performs. It is its soul.

March 27, 2007: 10:47 pm: kfarPast Events, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

Etz Chaim Hi
Lecha Dodi
Bein Mayim L’Yayin

Rock out on Israeli Independence Day with an All Ages show featuring Heedoosh, whose visceral sound is akin to shoving your soul into an electric socket. Embracing styles from hard rock grunge to sensually melodic ballads, Heedoosh sonically traverses a brooding, middle eastern fusion with Hebrew lyrics that convey both the longing for, and imminence of, redemption.

Their songs are of breathtaking beauty and complexity, rooted in sacred text and combined with contemporary verses gilded with a true rock edge influenced by Stone Temple Pilots, Radiohead, Coldplay and Oasis- a mix of hard rock and brit-pop with Hebrew lyrics and Jewish themes. The songs hold fast to their rock roots and their Jewish sources without compromising any integrity on either front.

Map it

December 2, 2006: 12:56 am: kfarPast Events, Special Events, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe


The KNISH returns! Join for an xmas alternative so traditional its truly alternative. Shtreimel join us from Montreal on their US tour for jams that are part John Popper and Blues Traveler and part simcha band. Plus rising hip hop star of David Kosha Dillz and classic rock sounds by Moshe Skier Band

Its gonna be hot as… as a knish! Buy advance tix to avoide the sellout. Take public transit (Damen El Stop, Blue Line). Don’t miss the midnight knish drop, hanukah gelt pelting and the airing of grievances!
Map it

Shtreimel
Uncle Tibor’s Spicy Paprikash
Halevai
Galitzianer Tantz
v’Yerushalayim
Asher Bara

Kosha Dillz
Promised Land
One for Israel

Moshe Skier Band
Kol HaOlam Kulo (Gesher Tzar Meod)
Carlebach/Jeff Beck Jam

Official Media Sponsor:

: 12:51 am: kfarPast Events, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

Name four great Hanukkah songs. OK, then how about two good Chanukkah songs? Not easy, huh? “Dreidel, Spin, Spin, Spin” is a fun little ditty but let’s face it, it doesn’t exactly rock and/or roll. Even the great Jewish songwriters, from Irving Berlin to Lieber and Stoller, only wrote Christmas songs. The Festival of Lights could really use some tunes! Two nice Jewish guys have taken up the important task of writing a bunch of great, rockin’ Hanukah songs. Adam Gardner (Guster) and Dave Schneider (the Zambonis) have joined forces and started a band called the LeeVees, and they have a new album of sweet and rockin’ indie-pop songs solely about Channuka called “Hanukkah Rocks.” Yes, every song is about Chanuka. Some say such a concept is a bit obsessive but Adam and Dave prefer the phrase “extremely focused.”

Map it

Applesauce vs. Sour Cream
Latke Clan
Kugel

August 23, 2006: 3:47 pm: kfarPast Events, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

Evën Sh’siyah According to Kabbalistic tradition was the original element of Creation from which the entire world came into existence. The band layers original lyrics and ancient Hebrew texts over folk rock grooves with an eclectic blend of Mid-Eastern spice, Southern jam rock sweetness and jam band solos.
Hisoreri

plus a special appearance by…

Matthue Roth (as seen on HBO’s Def Poetry Slam)
Juggling adrenaline and humor like a kid playing with a loaded gun, Matthue riffs on his experience as an Orthodox Jew, mixing in meditations on sexuality, gender roles, and the conflict between vegetarianism and his grandmother’s cooking. Matthue throws hip-hop, slam poetry, and storytelling together in an on-stage riot that’s reverent and irreverent at the same time (contains explicit material).

18+ show $10 students/$12 adv. tix/$15 doors
10:00pm doors, Saturday, September 9th 2007
Beat Kitchen, 2100 W. Belmont Ave., Chicago Map it!
Via CTA Bus: #77 Bemont, #50 Damen or #49 Western

presented as part of

with promotional support from Sidney N. Shure City North Kehilla
March 17, 2006: 11:12 pm: kfarTzitzit: Jewish Fringe

As we prepare for our next, most ambitious season to date, we’re revamping our website, raising funds and planning for the coming year. Thank you for your patience and ongoing support. In the interim, feel free to email us at info@kfarcenter.com

November 29, 2005: 1:40 pm: kfarPast Events, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

Beer Besade Frevo Los Bilbilicos

Award winning instrumentalists Juancho Herrera of Caracas Venezuela and Mattan Klein of Jerusalem, Israel were born over 6000 miles apart. Their roads, however, have crossed in the U.S.A. and their musical and cultural backgrounds created the foundation for one of the most exquisite world-music collaborations in North America. Juancho and Mattan’s love and admiration for each other’s musical tradition and rich religious culture brought together two of New York’s busiest composers and performers to create a true world-music cross-over project, which involves Latin, Jewish, Brazilian, Ladino, Jazz and Funk elements, but all the while preserves the innovative voices they both carry as representatives of their nations.

Ben Zwerin, bass, was born in Paris, France. His incredible knowledge of music from South America, Africa and the Middle East, in addition to his experience as a leading Jazz artist on the New York scene make him a unique addition to the ensemble’s sound. Being the son of Jazz legend Mike Zwerin (played with Miles Davis, Eric Dolphy and many more), Ben has absorbed a wide range of influences into his performance. Mathias Kunzli, percussion, is one of the busiest drummers/percussionists in New York. He is a recording artist with the John Zorn Tzadik label, and performed with figures such as Yo Yo Ma Silk Road Project, Airto Moreira, Flora Purim, Randy Brecker, Oscar Castro-Neves, John Zorn’s Electric Masada, Bob Berg, Bobby Watson, Paul Winter Consort, Dave Samuel and many more. Mathias specializes in music from South America and the Middle East.

7:30pm doors, Thursday 11.10.05

1638 W. Belmont, Chicago (MapQuest)
In Lakeview @ Ashland and Lincoln
2 blocks from Paulina ‘L’ stop
Ample street parking and Belmont Bus access


presented as part of

September 18, 2005: 8:00 pm: kfarPast Events, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

Balkan Beat Box performs an inspired madness that crosses multi-cultural circus with non-stop dance party. Israeli bandmates Ori Kaplan (Gogol Bordello) and Tamir Muskat (Jewish Ukrainian Freundschaft) lead fellow expatriates Itamar Zieglar, Dana Leong and Vocalist Tomer Yosef through an infectious mish-mosh of hip hop, reggae and Slavic sounds, infused with Mediterraneam, Balkan, and Jewish influences. The band is part of the NYC musical underground that includes the bands Big Lazy, Pink Nose, Firewater, JUF, Gogl Bordello and Shotnez. Its full horn section, dj beats, percussion and video projections come together for a surreal atmosphre that’s part Gypsy caravan, part performance-art collective, Balkan Beat Box is a south European cross-cultural experience that has evolved into a non-stop dance party.

Bulgarian Chix

Golem’s raw material lies in Yiddish theater songbooks, shtetls and bandleader Annette Ezekiel’s field recordings from Lower East Side locales like bagel shops staffed by Turkmen Jews. She reconstructs these songs much the same as the 16th-century legend of the MAHARAL of Prague. who fashioned a golem monster out of clay.

Greine Kusine

presented as part of


September 9, 2005: 8:31 pm: kfarPress, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe



By PAUL WIEDER

“Stir it up,” sang Bob Marley; the impetus to stir different sounds together affects all music. Ray Charles, as we are reminded in his recent movie, blended gospel and R&B. Bands like the Moody Blues and ELO merged rock and orchestral music. Klezmer is no exception, and it has already been combined with jazz, bluegrass, and reggae.

Two newer acts mingle klezmer with, respectively, techno and rock… and the Kfar Jewish Arts Center is bringing them to the Wild Hare as part of Chicago’s annual World Music Festival on Sept. 18.

Balkan Beat Box is an Israeli duo: Tamir Muskat, a rock drummer, and Ori Kaplan, a klezmer clarinetist. Their band’s music pulls from Israeli, Arabic, Roma (or “Gypsy”), Eastern European, and even Spanish sources. So on Balkan Beat Box’s upcoming debut release, there are lots of reedy horns, tangy strings, insistent and complicated percussion, and vocals both rapped and wailing.

They then overlay this expansive version of klezmer on a techno base. Techo is the rhythm-heavy, dance-party version of electronica, sort of the Internet Age response to disco. The result is a cross between 3 Mustaphas 3 and Moby, a big, happy, messy clangor–the carnival sound of an afterparty in a Ben-Yehuda Street nightclub, when only the musicians and their friends are left.

Meanwhile, Golem combines klezmer and rock. But it is a different kind of klezmer; BBB’s klezmer is that of the open market and cabaret, while Golem’s is a more familiar Yiddish strain, that of the wedding hall and Second Avenue stage. And while BBB adds Middle Eastern and electronic instruments, Golem stays with more traditional klezmer instrumentation.

What makes Golem a rock-and-roll band involves two other elements. One is their material; they find Yiddish songs that are less cheery, and less G-rated, than usual. And then they play their violins and accordions with a righteous fury that would make Keith Moon proud.

While it has the harsh passion of punk, Golem’s music has little of punk’s underlying idealism. Golem is, in fact, a garage band that happens to play klezmer. It revels in its stygian misery like Robert Johnson; it treasures its forlorn angst like Morrissey. If Courtney Love wants to appreciate Jewishness in her own language, she should walk right out of the Kabbalah Center and head to a Golem show.

Music was meant to be played. And as far as these bands are concerned, it was made to be played with. They engage klezmer, challenging it to evolve and grow… and thus pay it as much a tribute as those who keep it under glass.

Balkan Beat Box and Golem are being presented by Kfar Jewish Arts Center as part of the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs’ 2005 Chicago World Music Festival. The concert is at the Wild Hare, 3530 N. Clark, on Sept. 18 at 8 p.m. Admission is $12. For tickets and more information, contact kfarcenter.org.

Posted: 9/9/2005

August 20, 2005: 10:00 pm: kfarPast Events, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

appearing with

Blue Fringe is one of the hottest Jewish rock bands around, having just released their second album, 70 Faces. Their style incorporates influences such as the Dave Matthews Band, Coldplay and John Mayer, and their popularity has seen them tour all across North America and in Israel and Australia, regularly performing for sellout crowds of 1,000 and up. mp3: Kacha Lo
As its name implies, Heedoosh is something of a musical revelation. Its soul-searching themes are unafraid to question foundations of faith, nor long for redemption. Influenced by Stone Temple Pilots, Oasis and Radiohead, Heedoosh reaches out to the unknown for answers with sacred songs combined with contemporary Hebrew verse and gilded with true rock edge. Their style is a new discovery on an ancient text: a Heedoosh. Sound Sample: Lev Tahor


Presented as part of KFAR’s concert series