Yale Strom

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Yale Strom
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Background information
Birth name Yale Strom
Genre(s) Klezmer
Occupation(s) violin, composer, filmmaker, writer, photographer, playwright
Instrument(s) Violin
Years active 1981[1] - Present
Associated acts Hot Pstromi - Klazzj
Website http://www.yalestrom.com

Yale Strom (violin, composer, filmmaker, writer, photographer, playwright) is a pioneer among klezmer revivalists in conducting extensive field research in Central and Eastern Europe and the Balkans among the Jewish and Rom communities since 1981. Initially, his work focused primarily on the use and performance of klezmer music between these two groups. Gradually, his focus increased to examining all aspects of their culture, from post-World War II to the present. In the more than two decades since his initial ethnographic trip, Yale Strom has become the world’s leading ethnographer-artist of klezmer and history..


Contents

[edit] Music

Yale Strom’s klezmer field research helped form the base for the repertoires of his two klezmer bands, Hot Pstromi in New York and Klazzj in San Diego. Since Yale’s first band began in 1981, he has been composing his own New Jewish music, which combines klezmer with Hasidic nigunim, Rom, jazz, classical, Balkan and Sephardic motifs. These compositions range from quartets to a symphony, which premiered with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra. He composed original music for the Denver Center production of Tony Kushner’s “The Dybbuk”. He also composed all the New Jewish music for the National Public Radio series “Fiddlers, Philosophers & Fools: Jewish Short Stories From the Old World to the New”, hosted by Leonard Nimoy, as well as numerous film scores. Strom is also one of the only top composers of Jewish music to carry on the tradition of writing original songs, with Yiddish lyrics, about humanitarian and social issues. His CD, “Garden of Yidn”, debuted in the Top 20 on Canada’s major music critic’s poll (Mundial) and has been hailed by Sing Out! Magazine as “a landmark in modern Yiddish song.” His twelve CDs run the gamut of traditional klezmer to "new" Jewish music. His CD, “Garden of Yidn”, debuted in the Top 20 of Canada's major music critic's poll. His CD, “Klezmer: Café Jew Zoo” was released by Naxos World Records in June of 2003 to international acclaim. In autumn 2005 he had a new CD out on the Global Village Music label called “DVEYKES.” This cd features Yale’s new klezmer/jazz/improvisational compositions with world renown jazz musicians Mark Dresser and Marty Ehrlich. In 2007 Yale Strom & Hot Pstromi released “Borsht With Bread Brothers” (Arc Music) [2]


Strom has performed with many world renown musicians including Andy Statman, Mark Dresser, Marty Ehrlich, Mark O’Connor, Alicia Svigals, Salman Ahmad, et al. [3]


Yale’s violin has been heard on numerous recordings and soundtracks. He was the first klezmer violinist in history to be invited to instruct master classes at both the American String Teachers Association and the Mark O’Connor Fiddle Camp.

Yale has been hailed as “a commanding bandleader and composer” (Pulse! Magazine), “one of the best klezmer musicians in the country” (Houston Public News) and “an all-around musical visionary” (Seth Rogovoy). Dirty Linen sums it up most concisely: “Yale Strom is a Jewish roots trip unto himself”. The New York Jewish Week writes:

“He’s a gifted photographer and author, a talented documentary filmmaker and has his own klezmer band... Strom’s multifaceted career is a wonder, and his work schedule is downright fiendish.”

[edit] Books

Strom’s research has also resulted in nine books[4] (including “The Last Jews of Eastern Europe” and “Uncertain Roads: Searching for the Gypsies”. He was the first photographer since Roman Vishniac to publish photographs of Jews in the Eastern Bloc countries. His “The Book of Klezmer: The History, The Music, The Folklore”, a 400-page history with original photos and sheet music gathered by Yale during his 60+ ethnographic trips to Central and Eastern Europe, was published by A Cappella Books in September, 2002; this was soon followed by the publication of the world’s first “Music Minus One” Instructional Guide to Klezmer (Universal Edition, Vienna Austria, April 2004). Strom’s most recent book, written in collaboration with his wife, Elizabeth Schwartz, is “A Wandering Feast: A Journey Through the Jewish Culture of Eastern Europe” (Jossey-Bass Publishers, January 2005). Strom’s newest book “The Absolute Complete Klezmer Songbook” (2006, Transcontinental Music). His first children's book The Black Wedding will be published in 2008.

[edit] Film

Strom has directed five award-winning documentary films (“At the Crossroads”, “The Last Klezmer,” “Carpati: 50 Miles, 50 Years”, “L’Chayim, Comrade Stalin!” and “Klezmer on Fish Street”) and has composed music for countless others. He was the first documentary filmmaker in history to be given his own run at Lincoln Center’s prestigious Walter Reade Theatre, where “The Last Klezmer” broke previous box office records; this record was only exceeded by “Carpati”’s run there. Both films went on to strong theatrical runs both in the U.S. and abroad, and were featured on major Top Ten Lists (The Last Klezmer on the N.Y. Post’s for 1994, and Carpati on the San Diego Union Tribune’s for 1997). “The Last Klezmer” was short-listed for an Academy Award. “Klezmer on Fish Street” won the 2003 Palm Beach International Film Festival’s Special Jury Selection award. However, the film only grossed $5,734 in theatrical receipts during its 2004 commercial release. [5] He has just completed the documentary “A Man From Munkacs:The Gypsy Klezmer ” for a German-Hungarian production company, and is in pre-production on the feature film “Canary” and the documentary “Detroit: In Black & White”. Most recently, he is in post-production on the feature documentary “The Harry Agganis Story”.

[edit] Photo Exhibits

Strom’s solo photo exhibit, “The Rom of Ridgewood”, about Gypsy communities in Queens, New York, was mounted at the Queens Museum of Art; he has had numerous solo exhibits (depicting Jewish and Rom life) throughout the U.S. and Europe (complete exhibition list upon request). His solo exhibit of portraits of klezmer musicians in Bessarabia, “Klezmorim”, is currently touring throughout Europe. His photos are part of many collections including Beth Hatefusoth, The Skirball Museum, The Jewish Museum of NYC, The Frankfurt Jewish Museum and the The Museum of Photographic Arts.

[edit] Plays

Strom’s original stage play, “…from man… to beast… to crawling thing…”, was given a fully-staged workshop in June of 2001 by the Streisand Festival (La Jolla, California) and has been optioned for production. His new play, “Verdigris” (formally Yiske Labushnik) was workshopped by the San Diego Rep, North Coast Rep as well as in New York City, Connecticut and Los Angeles. Yale was featured in the May 31, 2004 issue of Time Magazine for this play, and the scholarship behind it.

[edit] Lectures

Strom has lectured extensively throughout the Untied States and Europe and taught at NYU for the 4 years, where he created the course “Artist-Ethnographer Expeditions”. He is on the advisory board of the Center for Jewish Creativity, based in Los Angeles. At present he is Artist-in-Residence in the Jewish Studies Program at San Diego State University. Strom is the guest curator for the Eldridge Street Project's A Great Day on Eldridge Street-- a musical and photographic celebration of the newly restored Eldridge Street Synagogue that will take place in October 2007 with a parade, a historic archival photo shoot, numerous panels and performances and a New York statewide tour.

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