Fabrangen Fiddlers

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The Fabrangen Fiddlers are an American Jewish folk music band. Founded in 1971, the Washington, DC-area group were the first music collective devoted to the rediscovery of Jewish folk music and the development of new Jewish liturgical folk music.

[edit] Origin

The Fabrangen Fiddlers formed in 1971 as part of the Fabrangen Chavurah, one of the original chavurahs to form in the United States, as cited in The Jewish Catalog. The movement formed in the late 1960s and early 1970s as an alternative to traditional Jewish synagogues and temples. The desire was to discover a more authentic Jewish experience. The early chavurah movement was characterized by experimentation and reforging of ritual. It was in this environment in 1971 that David Shneyer, Alan Oresky and Frank Sparber formed a trio that was to become the Fabrangen Fiddlers. The group started by creating original liturgical music for traditional Hebrew prayers for the Fabrangen community. Rabbi Arthur Waskow has written extensively about the formation of the Fabrangen community.

By 1975 the Fabrangen Fiddlers had become independent from the Fabrangen Chavurah.

[edit] American Chai!

Their second album American Chai! (1976 ) blended American, Jewish liturgical, and klezmer music. In a 1979 review in Jewish Living Magazine, music critic Nat Hentoff wrote that the Fiddlers "create an astonishing blend. Their lyrics are in Hebrew and Yiddish, and the spirited backgrounds include elements of bluegrass -- a 'purer' country idiom than the Nashville sound -- jazz, hillbilly, blues, and, of course, the swirling 'cry' of Yiddish swing."

The album featured psalms; Hasidic tunes; even a poem by the Indian writer Rabindranath Tagore translated into Yiddish, and a hasidic "raga" in which Theo Stone plays sitar. Hentoff wrote, "much of the music is deeply lyrical, and all of it is performed with such joy and respect that American Chai! is both a pleasure in itself and also, I believe, a historic document, for this is not mere ecumenicism. The music here, is unmistakably, freshly Jewish and opens new avenues in the art of listening."

In a 1978 interview with the Baltimore Jewish Times, the Fabrangen Fiddlers explained that throughout history, Jews have always borrowed from the surrounding culture while retaining their own ethnic identity. Wherever Jews were in the diaspora, they picked up musical styles: Spanish, Russian, Eastern European, North African Arabic. It was a natural transition for American klezmer performers to experiment with American music styles for Jewish liturgical and celebratory music.

In The New Jewish Yellow Pages, Mae Shafter Rockland wrote that the Fabrangen Fiddlers, vaguely annoyed with the extent to which Israeli music dominated Jewish music in America, felt the time was ripe for a flowering of a hyphenated Jewish-American culture. Rockland quotes musicologist Ruth Rubin as saying that the Fabrangen Fiddlers "…are the best there is… [violinist] Alan [Oresky] is absolutely remarkable, the fiddle is part of his arm."

[edit] Members

  • David Shneyer
  • Sue Roemer
  • Alan Oresky
  • Frank Sparber
  • Theo Stone
  • Larry Robinson