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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 Max and Frieda Weinstein Archives of Recorded Sound houses over 15,000
recordings, including 78, 45, and 33 rpm discs; cylinder recordings; open-reel and cassette
tapes; piano rolls; and compact discs. The collection includes both music and spoken word
recordings, and also contains record catalogs, and other materials related to the history of
recorded Jewish music. The earliest item in the collection is a wax cylinder, dating from
1900.
YIVO's collection of recorded Jewish music is one of the most extensive
and frequently consulted in the world. It embraces all 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
The collection includes unique test recordings never released by the record companies that
made them, as well as the only known surviving examples of some recordings that were
released.
The Sound Archive also has custody of spoken word and field recordings originating in other
record groups in the Archives, including
- Over 200 recordings of Jewish radio programs spanning the years 1936 to
1955 (Collection of Radio Programs, RG 130).
- 43 oral history interviews about the history of the American Jewish labor movement,
taped by YIVO in 1964-1968 (Oral History Collection on the Labor Movement, RG
113).
- Several hundred interviews with Jews from Eastern and Western Europe and with
American Jews, recorded by Beatrice Silverman Weinreich and her colleagues as part
of the YIVO Dialect Project in 1948-1949.
- Field recordings of Hasidic, cantorial, folk, Sephardic, and theater music (Ruth Rubin,
Benedict Stambler,and Ben Stonehill Collections, RGs 620, 1014, 533).
For inquiries about recorded sound holdings in the YIVO Archives or for a Sound Archive
research appointment, contact the Sound Archivist, Lorin Sklamberg, (212) 294-6169.
Listen to Samples from the Sound Archive
Note:
To hear the audio excerpts you must have RealPlayer version 6.0 or higher installed on your system.
The player can be downloaded for free from the RealPlayer
Home Page.
Ven ikh bin a Rotshild (If I Were a Rothschild)
A 1915 "trial" recording made in New York City of Yiddish writer Sholem Aleichem reading an excerpt of one of his best-known humor pieces.
(749KB)
Tshaban
A pre-World War I recording of Belf's Rumanian Orchestra playing a klezmer dance tune, Bucharest, Rumania.
(1.2MB)
Tshastushki: Lomir zikh tsukishn (Let's Kiss Each Other)
Singer: Aaron Lebedeff
Composer: Alexander Olshanetzky
A Yiddish/Russian song from the Yiddish theater production, Goldene teg (Golden Days), recorded in 1928 in New York City.
(885KB)
Uvyom simkhaskhem (On Your Joyous Occasion)
An early acoustic recording of Cantor Josef (Yossele) Rosenblatt.
(726KB)
Links to Other Jewish Sound Collections
Feher Jewish Music Center at Beth Hatefutsoth
Jewish National and University
University Library
The Judaica Collection of the Harvard College Library
Library of the Jewish Theological Seminary
The Milken Archive of American Jewish Music
The Robert
and Molly Freedman Jewish Music Archive at Annenberg Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Pennsylvania Library
CAPTION FOR IMAGE AT TOP OF PAGE:
Record label for Dzhum dzhum, sung by Aaron Lebedeff and recorded in the by Sirena Grand Records in the Soviet Union, ca. early 1920s.
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