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Introduction
Archives
Special Collections
Library
Jewish Genealogy Resources
Resources for Studying the Holocaust
Preservation of Rare Books & Documents
Services Price List
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Overview
The Music Collections consist of written music (both published and unpublished) of many
different genres, including:
- Yiddish and Hebrew art, folk, popular and theater music
- Holocaust songs
- Liturgical and Hasidic music
- Choral music
- Instrumental compositions
- Children's songs
- Holiday songs
- Klezmer music
These materials can be found in the mixed-provenance Music Collection (RG 112), in the
personal papers of individual composers and conductors, and in other YIVO Archives
collections. Collections of published music are also available in the YIVO Library.
For inquiries about music holdings in the YIVO Archives or for a music research
appointment, contact the Music Archivist, Chana Mlotek, (212) 246-6080, ext. 6119.
Highlights of the Music Collections
This collection consists of published and unpublished works of Yiddish and Hebrew; art,
folk, popular, and theater music; Holocaust songs; liturgical and Hasidic music; choral
music; and instrumental compositions. It includes several thousand pieces of published
sheet music by composers and arrangers such as Abraham Ellstein, Abraham Goldfaden,
Pinchas Jassinowski, Alexander Olshanetzky, Joseph Rumshinsky, and Sholem Secunda. It
also includes published and unpublished choral, folk, classical, popular, liturgical, Hasidic,
and Holocaust-related music by many different composers; as well as programs, clippings,
photographs, and other documents about Jewish music.
Outstanding collections of cantorial and choral synagogue music can be found in the
personal papers of:
- Abraham Moshe Bernstein (1866-1932).Cantor, choir master, composer of Jewish
liturgical and popular music, music teacher, musicologist, and writer. Lived in
Vilna. (RG 36)
- Leo Low (1876-1960). Jewish composer, arranger, choral conductor, teacher, lecturer.
One of the first to collect, arrange, and popularize Yiddish and Hebrew folk and art
songs. Choir conductor at the Great Synagogue in Vilna, Bucharest Reform Temple,
Tlomackie Synagogue in Warsaw, Hazomir and Grosser Club choruses in Warsaw,
choruses of the Jewish National Workers' Alliance and Workmen’s Circle in New
York. (RG 1140)
- Mordechai Moniak (1895-1938). Cantor, composer. Born in Kishinev. (RG 412)
- Meyer Posner (1890-1931). Composer and compiler of liturgical music for cantor and
choir. (RG 217)
- Lazar Weiner (1897-1982). Jewish composer, music teacher, conductor, choral
director, pianist. Music director of the Central Synagogue in Manhattan. Director of
the Workmen’s Circle Choral Society. Active in a number of musical organizations.
(RG 711)
- Elias Zaludkowski (1888-1943). Cantor. Wrote on Jewish liturgical and folk music.
Lived in Byelorussia, Poland, and the United States. (RG 212)
The following collections are among the Archives’ most important resources for the study
of Jewish art and folk music:
- Sidor Belarsky (1900-1975). Singer of classical and folk music.
Known for his performances, recordings, and arrangements of Russian
and Yiddish folk songs as well as for his appearances as a bass baritone
soloist with orchestras and opera companies. Professor of Music at the
Jewish Teachers' Seminary-Herzliah Institute in New York City. (RG 721)
- Samuel Bugatch (1898-1984). Jewish composer, conductor of choral groups and
synagogue choirs, lecturer, writer. Music director, Beth Tefiloh Synagogue,
Baltimore, and Temple Adath Israel, Bronx. Composed and arranged liturgical and
secular works. Compiled an anthology of Yiddish and Hebrew songs. (RG 712)
- Mordechai Gebirtig (1877-1942). Yiddish folk poet and carpenter whose songs are
among the best known in Yiddish folk literature. His most famous song, "Undzer
shtetl brent" (Our Town Is On Fire), was composed after a pogrom in Przytyk, Poland,
in 1938. Gebirtig was killed by the Nazis during a deportation from the Krakow
Ghetto. (RG 740)
- Michl Gelbart (1889-1962). Jewish composer, music critic, music
teacher in the Workmen’s Circle schools. Wrote music to Yiddish poems
and to six children's operettas. Compiled songbooks for Yiddish secular
schools. (RG 467)
- Vladimir Heifetz (1900-1970). Composer, conductor, choral director and pianist. Served as musical director of the Rudolf
Schildkraut Theatre, the chorus of the Poale Zion (Farband), the Yiddish Culture
Chorus, the Patterson Singing Society in New Jersey, Temple Anshe Chesed, the
Jamaica Jewish Center. Heifetz wrote over 80 compositions and about 200
arrangements and orchestrations. He wrote music for the Yiddish Art Theater,
Folksbiene Theater, and for several motion pictures. He also composed a symphony,
an opera, an oratorio, and a number of cantatas. (RG 1259)
- Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett Collection, ca. 1900-1970s.
The collection of folklorist and anthropologist Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett is a rich resource for published folk and popular Jewish and Yiddish sheet music.
- Solomon Shmulewitz-Small (1868-1943) Yiddish poet, playwright, composer, and folk
singer born in Pinsk, Byelorussia. Came to the U.S. in 1891. (RG 214)
- Lazar Weiner (1897-1982). Jewish composer, music teacher, conductor, choral
director, pianist. Music director of the Central Synagogue in Manhattan. Director of
the Workmen’s Circle Choral Society. Active in a number of musical organizations.
(RG 711)
- Music (Vilna Archives) (1882-1940.
Materials that were originally part of the Esther Rachel Kaminska Theater Museum established by YIVO in Vilna in 1927 out of an initial donation of the papers of Esther-Rachel Kaminska, who was known as the
"mother" of Yiddish theater. The collection includes manuscripts of musical works for the Yiddish theater, including music for about 300 operas, operettas, and vaudeville skits. There are also manuscripts and printed sheets of art, popular, dance, and liturgical music.
(RG 7)
- Abraham Goldfaden (1879-1930s). Playwright, poet, composer, producer, and
director. Founder of the Yiddish theater. Staged the first Yiddish theater production in
Jassy, Rumania, 1876. The collection includes manuscripts of Goldfaden's operettas. See Music (Vilna Archives) RG 7, for sheet music for the operettas.
(RG 219)
- David Hirsch (b. 1890). Composer of Yiddish theater music. One of the earliest
composers for the Yiddish theater in Rumania, he provided musical notation for the
melodies of Abraham Goldfaden. (RG 1225)
- Sholem Perlmutter (1884-1954). Writer, playwright, professional prompter in the
Yiddish theater. Founder and secretary of the League of Yiddish Playwrights. Founder
of the Society of Jewish Composers, Lyricists and Publishers. Served on the Executive
Committee of the Leksikon fun yidishn teater (Lexicon of the Yiddish Theater). (RG
289)
- Herman Yablokoff (1902-1981). Actor, composer, lyricist. Composed musicals and
songs for the Yiddish stage, including the hit song Papirosn (Cigarettes). Head of the Hebrew
Actors Union in New York. (RG 1188)
- Gabriel Zarzhevsky (b. 1888). Yiddish theater producer. Managed theater companies
in the Ukraine (Ekaterinoslav), Russia, Poland, Turkey (Constantinople), the United
States. Changed his name to Harry Zar after emigration to U.S. in 1920. (RG 407)
For inquiries about music holdings in the YIVO Archives, or for a music research appointment, contact the Music Archivist, Chana Mlotek, (212) 246-6080, ext. 6119.
CAPTION FOR IMAGE AT TOP OF PAGE:
Sheet music for Abraham Goldfaden's opera King Ahasverus, published in New York in 1899. (Music Collection, RG 112)
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