Description: STOCK PHOTOS ONLY Moishe Oysher: The Master Singer of His People! 1. Halavai2. Unter Boimer3. Klapt Der Hammer4. Such a Punim!5. Belz6. Nigun7. Amar Rabi Elazar8. He's a Sensation!9. A Khazn Must Have All Three Virtues10. This Is W.H. Rosovitch Speaking11. Al Horishonim12. People... We Have a Khazn!13. Dos Keshenever Shtikele14. You Wanna Look Cute?15. Di Naye Hora16. Meditation17. Hin'ni18. Happy Chanukah19. Drey Dreydeleh20. Hallel (From Psalm 115, Adoshem Z'chawrawnu)21. Ki Lo Naweh22. Chad Gadyaw23. Curtain Call 'Moishe Oysher Brought Back to Life' On Saturday night I attended a wonderful performance at Beth Emet, the Free Synagogue in Evanston, IL, where Cantor Arik Luck and a troupe of performers paid a musical tribute to Moishe Oysher. Cantor Arik Luck played the starring role beautifully and convincingly, singing favorite Oysher songs, and appealingly giving background to some of the songs, such as explaining the narrative of Oysher's film 'Overture to Glory,' before signing a song from the film. I loved how he made the packed audience clap in tune with his reanimated Oysher, in a celebration of the joy of the Yiddish tunes. (In a sense, his bringing back to life Oysher reminds me of Steve Stern's new novel, Frozen Rabbi, to be published in May, though excerpted now in Tablet, Nextbook's online magazine, whose titular character comes back to life a century later after defrosting in a Memphis 1950s freezer.) What I noticed in Cantor Luck's captivating brief run-downs of Oysher's roles in his films was the theme of 'returning to the shtetl' that seems a trend in recent films and novels. According to Luck, Oysher starred in only four films in the U.S., and in the two that he talked about, there was the theme of Oysher's character dramatically returning to the shtetl, and a conflict between pursuing a life of religious study or a secular life on Broadway. In kind of a meta-narrative, Luck's reanimation of Oysher in turn reanimates the 19th century shtetl for us, the audience, and reanimates the Yiddishkeit of Oysher and his world, and helps us reconnect to our Jewish past, the life of the shtetl that was annihilated, the same life that Oysher's characters were, ironically, trying to break free from in their efforts to assimilate in America. It's this quintessential theme in Jewish-American literature and drama of the struggle between remembering and forgetting our past. In 'Booking Passage: Exile and Homecoming in the Modern Jewish Imagination,' Sidra DeKoven Ezrahi writes that the appeal of Isaac Bashevis Singer's writing 'came not from his refugee stories but from his reinvention of the shtetl....and what is transpiring in this shtetl of the mind, at it's most fundamental level, is a creative resolution of the struggle between remembering and forgetting.' It's interesting to see how contemporary writers, and performers like Cantor Arik Luck, are now reinventing the shtetl, how we have this fundamental compulsion to return to and to reinvent the shtetl, as Jonathan Safran Foer did in Everything is Illuminated. Perhaps the pendelum has swung and that now as Jews we have reached a certain point of comfort (arguably, too much comfort) on the continuum of assimilation into American society, now we feel the desire to reach back and find a sense of authenticity, to reach back and connect with our shtetl past. It's the same reason that the Coen Brothers start 'A Serious Man' with a reanimation of the shtetl, to try to forge a creative resolution to this struggle between remembering and forgetting that Jews in America, the Jews of the midcentury on the midwestern prairie as represented by Larry Gopnik in the Coen's film, and Jews today, are grappling with. It's an attempt, as Ezrahi put it in describing Yiddish writers in America in the 1950s, to 'reclaim a lost Jewish place and an interrupted Jewish story.' Cantor Luck's musical revue was joyous and celebratory, a pure and simple celebration of the music of our shtetl past and the Yiddish tunes Jews brought to the New Country. The Coen Brothers, and Steve Stern in A Frozen Rabbi, are also attempting to reclaim a lost Jewish place, the shtetl, but with the darker tones of irony and satire, looking from the disconnected perspective of the postmodern early twentieth century, grappling with the question of what it means today to be an authentic Jew (authenticity, 'realness', being hard to come by in the postmodern world). From 'Personal is Political' analyzing life, media and culture at the intersection of the personal and the public, a blog by Laura Hodes. For CD Player ITEM IS: USED - CD IN SLEEVE WHAT YOU GET: This auction is for the original media, and includes only the media (ie. CD, DVD ...) UNLESS specifically stated above and/or in the title. If more than just the media is included, it will state which items are (ie. artwork, case, etc ). Items that come in a sleeve refer to a generic CD sleeve (typically white) and will be sent with shipping protection to avoid damage during transit. If available, we will also send the front and/or back CD inserts if in stock. If these are important to you, please message us to verify we have them available to send. Please do not assume items are included other than what's stated. Again, ask questions PRIOR to purchasing if you have any concerns. IMAGES: All images/pictures are stock photos and are for reference only, mainly to show the type of music you will be getting. Please read "WHAT YOU GET" for what is included with the media. SHIPPING: We typically ship all items out within 2-4 business days after payment is received. In regards to the stated shipping and handling, remember that these costs include more than just postage. We combine shipping and handling, with each additional item after the first just $2 more. Message us for an invoice if Ebay doesn't automatically adjust it. 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Price: 24.99 USD
Location: Bloomfield, IN
End Time: 2025-02-04T01:57:59.000Z
Shipping Cost: 5.49 USD
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All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Brand: Unbranded
Type: CD
Artist: Moishe Oysher
Album Name: The Master Singer Of His People!
Release Title: The Master Singer Of His People!
Format: CD