Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0016351070128
Label: Yazoo
Manufacturer: Yazoo
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Yazoo
Release Date: February 19, 1992
Studio: Yazoo
Sales Rank: 37070
MPN: 7001
Disc 1:- Unzer Toirele
- Yiddisher March - Dave Tarras, Traditional
- Good Luck
- Polka "Strelotchek"
- Chasidic in America
- A Yid Bin Ich Gegboiren
- Dem Monastrishter Rebin's Chosid'l
- Hopkele
- Bridegroom Special
- Die Goldene Chasene
- Pas d'Espan
- Mazel in Liebe
- A Vaibele a Tsnien
- Zum Gali Gali
- Die Reize Nuch Amerkia
- Branan Hassene
- Kinos, Tkios un Ashrei - Dave Tarras, Traditional
- What Can You Mach? S'is America
- Oriental Hora
- Second Avenue Square Dance
- Freilachs
- Dayeynu
- Rumanian Fantasy
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Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: Known bizarrely for a time as the Jewish Benny Goodman, Ukrainian-born klezmer clarinetist Dave Tarras was the relatively reliable and refined answer to the wickeder Naftule Brandwein. Born in 1897, Tarras emigrated to the United States in 1921. He quickly rose through the ranks of Jewish musicians, first as a dependable sideman and later as a composer and band leader himself. Consisting mainly of skillfully remastered 78s, this diverse anthology collects two-dozen Tarras performances in a wide variety of settings (including samples of Jewish radio circa 1940). Tarras was a nimble wonder, with a singing tone and a seemingly endless stream of musical ideas. This album both captures Tarras's brilliance and preserves a form of music poised between the live-wire "crudeness" of European klezmer and the cool pop swing of the '50s. --Richard Gehr
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Dave Tarras was one of the pioneers of American klezmer music and an inspirer of the contemporary klezmer revival bands. Listen and enjoy these original recordings of this clarinet genius.
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Henry Sapoznik's notes alone are worth the price of this collection, so the extraordinary sound quality (for recordings from this era) makes it nothing less than a metsie fun a ganef! Just a few of the highlights: Moyshe Oysher's Yiddish scat in "Chassidic in America," the Barry Sisters (performing as the Bagleman Sisters and, I think, the Yiddish Swingtette), and the inimitable Seymour Rechtzeit's "Hopkele," not to mention the nostalgic WBBC Brooklyn patter. Mostly, though, with this CD I've finally understood why Dave Tarras was such a powerful inspiration for the klezmer revivalists of the last few decades. That man shvingt!
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This selection of 23 virtuoso cuts includes five repeats from the enchanting Music from the Yiddish Radio Project, on which Dave Tarras figures a large role.
The repeats include Moishe Oysher's classic nigun, Chasidic in America (1958), Dayenu (1950), Bridegroom Special (1940), Die Golden Chasene (1945), and my favorite, Abe Ellstein's rendition of Second Avenue Square Dance (1950).
The music is just as wonderful a second time, even if you already own the Radio Project. Aside from the repeats, this collection offers some extremely worthy numbers of its own--which unlike the former includes a few advertisements within the cuts, not as separate ones. There's no arguing with these gorgeous renditions, complete with the tinny ... Read More:
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In these recordings Dave Tarras plays with several orchestras in the span of about 30 years. If you are looking for a collection of clarinet solos, for which Tarras became a legend, then this is not the right cd, but rather you should get the two cd's titled "Dave Tarras - Master of Klezmer Music" (Global Village). On the other hand, here you can find a colorful and heterogeneous collection of tunes, some of which traditional (doynas, freilekhs, horas...), others more strongly influenced by the musical trends of the thirties. In several cases Jewish traditional tunes blend gracefully with swing and jazz. Some tracks are introduced by the original radio broadcastings, which make this album even more precious. There is also an unusually long ... Read More:
Rating: -
In these recordings Dave Tarras plays with several orchestras in the span of about 30 years. If you are looking for a collection of clarinet solos, for which Tarras became a legend, then this is not the right cd, but rather you should better get the cd titled "Dave Tarras - Master of Klezmer Music vol.2" (Global Village). On the other hand, here you can find a colorful and heterogeneous collection of tunes, some of which traditional (doynas, freilekhs, horas...), others more strongly influenced by the musical trends of the thirties. In several cases Jewish traditional tunes blend gracefully with swing and jazz. Some tracks are introduced by the original radio broadcastings, which make this album even more precious. There is also a long and ... Read More:
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