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Jewish Cello Masterpieces
Ernest Bloch, Max Bruch, Maurice Ravel
Jewish Cello Masterpieces
Genres: Folk, Special Interest, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

A beautiful collection of great Jewish Music. Classics by Ernest Bloch and Max Bruch, mixed with rarely heard gems by Maurice Ravel, Zavel Zilberts, Jacob Wasilkovsky, and David Meyerowitz. "Wie Shlecht es is Ohn Gelt", a ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Ernest Bloch, Max Bruch, Maurice Ravel, Zavel Zilberts, Jacob Wasilkovsky, David Meyerowitz, Richard Locker, Susan Walters
Title: Jewish Cello Masterpieces
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Leggiero Records
Original Release Date: 9/20/2002
Release Date: 9/20/2002
Genres: Folk, Special Interest, Classical
Styles: Jewish & Yiddish, Holiday & Wedding, Instruments, Strings, Sacred & Religious
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 659057299228

Synopsis

Album Description
A beautiful collection of great Jewish Music. Classics by Ernest Bloch and Max Bruch, mixed with rarely heard gems by Maurice Ravel, Zavel Zilberts, Jacob Wasilkovsky, and David Meyerowitz. "Wie Shlecht es is Ohn Gelt", a Yiddish Theatre gem, is alone worth the price of admission for its mixture of pathos and humor. The songs by Zilberts are an important and beautiful part of the Jewish music legacy that must be heard.

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CD Reviews

Encore! Encore!
Rabbi Yonassan Gershom | Minnesota, USA | 01/13/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Perhaps no other instrument captures the sad-sweet contemplative mood of classical Jewish music like a cello. Is this because so many Jewish composers have written for the cello, that we think of it as a "Jewish" instrument? Or did they choose the cello because it sings so beautifully of the Jewish soul? Like the chicken and the egg, this question may never be answered -- but it doesn't really matter. This superb music is an important part of our Jewish legacy in its own right.

On this CD, cellist Richard Locker, accompanied by Susan Walters on piano, brings together 12 classical Jewish pieces, some well-known and others not so, in an absolutely magnificent performance -- so beautiful, that it literally brought tears to my eyes. The CD starts out with a niggun (Hasidic tune) by Ernest Bloch, then moves into to the dark, somber strains of Max Bruch's "Kol Nidre." From there it rises in mood, to end with a playful Yiddish theater piece, "Wie schecht is ohne Gelt" (How awful it is to be without money!) Included is the rarely heard "Meditation Hebraique" by Bloch, which he dedicated to Pable Casals, and a trio of pieces by the lesser-known composer, Zavel Zilberts (1881-1949), who directed the Choral Society of New York and played with the Metropolitan Opera. All of this is performed on a cello made by Nicolo Gagliano, dated 1780. To hear such a fine old instrument played by a talented, sensitive musician is truly a mechayah! (pleasure)"
Superb performances
Jonathan Miller | Newton, Ma USA | 10/09/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Although Locker is not widely known yet, he is a remarkable cellist and has recorded an extremely beautiful CD of music related to Jewish themes. Some of the pieces were familiar to me, like Ravel's "Kadish"; others are more obscure but come to life under his fingers.
In admiring this recording, I imagined hearing the qualities of both Heifetz and Casals. Mr. Locker is clearly a very creative player with a style of playing which is uniquely vivid, honest, and compelling.
The sound quality of the recording is excellent, and I certainly recommend its inclusion in the library of not only those who love the voice of the cello, or Jewish themes, but anyone who admires great string playing."
Jewish Masterpieces played by a master cellist.
Joseph J. Zuska | Los Alamitos, CA United States | 11/04/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The playing of Richard Locker is disturbing in that it does not allow you to do anything else while the CD is playing. His tonal beauty and intensity command your entire attention. One realizes immediately that there is substance and meaning in this music. I want to hear more from this gifted, sensitive musician and his equally talented accompanist, particularly from the great library of chamber music."