Includes popular Israeli ballads, songs for Passover and Chanukah (including Peter YarrowÃs "Light One Candle"), favorite songs from the liturgy, Debbie FriedmanÃs "Alef Bet," and the Yiddish gems "Oifn Pripitchik" and "Tumbalalaika."
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
good solid book,
By Stella Fitzgibbons "language junkie" (The Woodlands, TX United States) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The World's Most Popular Jewish Songs for Piano, Volume 1 (Tara Books) (Paperback)
Arrangements are intermediate-level, good tunes and cover a number of Jewish holidays. A very welcome from most Jewish songbooks, which seem designed for elementary school use. I plan to use some of these to include Chanukah when I play for holiday parties.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Nice Selection of Intermediate-Level Jewish Songs,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The World's Most Popular Jewish Songs for Piano, Volume 1 (Tara Books) (Paperback)
Some of my favorite Jewish songs are included. Some of them are songs that I attempted to learn when touring Israel for 22 days with a group. None of us did very well with them. I would like to learn them now that I'm back home.The arrangements are lovely, probably Intermediate-level. Disclaimer: I am a Christian who loves Jewish music, but definitely not an expert on it. I'm also studying Hebrew, and although I'm not very good at it, I thought I could practice the piano and learn Hebrew at the same time. I am so not an expert on Jewish music, so my review is just based on the fact that this book serves my purposes very well. The Hebrew words there with the music so I can practice singing them. The words are written out IN HEBREW at the bottom of each page. The English interpretation is given below the Hebrew version. There is a key to transliteration "a...as in car; ai...as in sigh...ch...as in Bach..." I wish I knew how all these songs are used and enjoyed in Jewish culture. Some of them are obvious, of course, but some are totally new to me. Even though I'm not very good at Hebrew, I did pick up on the fact that a couple of these song titles are not Hebrew but are English and Spanish. :) I can make an attempt at singing along with the music as written with the notes. Then I can practice reading it in Hebrew as include below each song. Then I can read the English interpretation to see what the words actually mean. Awesome! All of that is a great Hebrew teaching tool, but I always want to know what songs are included before I buy a book. I will write them below. I hope I haven't made too many typos: 1. Hava Nagila 2. Erev Shel Shoshanim 3. Bashana Haba'a 4. Tsena 5. Hal'luya 6. Y'rushalayim Shel Zahav 7. Ush'avtem Mayim 8. Sisu Et Y'rushalayim 9. Oifn Pripitchik 10. Yidishe Ma'me 11. Tumbalalaika 12. Der Rebe Elimelech 13. Bai Mir Bistu Shen 14. Zog Nit Kenmol 15. Rozhinkes Mit Mandlen 16. Cuando El Rey Nimrod 17. Ocho Kandelikas 18. Amen Shem Nora 19. Mi Pi El 20. Momele 21. Light One Candle 22. Alef Bet 23. Jerusalem is Mine 24. Y'did Nefesh 25. Shalom Alechem 26. Ma'oz Tsur 27. Ma Nishtana 28. Uva'u Ha'ovdim 29. Od Yishama 30. Esa Enai 31. Nigun
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