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  2. Religious Jewish music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_Jewish_music

    Jewish Music A large database of free religious Jewish sheet music for download. Including audio and video presentations. shulmusic.org A collection representing the Anglo-German choral tradition, in sheet music and sound files; Music in Kabbalah. The Nigun from an Ethnomusicological Perspective; Power of the Nigun nigun.info; Sephardic ...

  3. Yeshiva Boys Choir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeshiva_Boys_Choir

    The Yeshiva Boys Choir, also known as YBC, is a contemporary Jewish religious music boys choir. The choir is conducted by Yossi Newman, and their songs are composed, arranged and produced by Eli Gerstner. Quickly after their first album, they became well known around the Orthodox Jewish community. They went on to release many hit songs, and ...

  4. Shlomo Katz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shlomo_Katz

    Shlomo was born into a family of musicians, most notably his father Cantor Avshalom Katz. As a youth he sang in choirs and was trained in violin for seven years. [5] Shlomo eventually switched to guitar and is best known for his performances with that instrument.

  5. Contemporary Jewish religious music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contemporary_Jewish...

    Within the traditional Jewish community, cantoral and chasiddic melodies were the musical standard.. In the 1950s and early 1960s recordings began to be made of non-cantorial Jewish music, beginning with Ben Zion Shenker's recording of the music of the Modzitz chassidic sect [2] and Cantor David Werdyger's Gerrer recordings.

  6. Dedi Graucher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dedi_Graucher

    Dedi began his music career providing back-up vocals on Mordechai Ben David's albums in the late 1970s and early 1980s. [1] In 1995 he performed with Ben David at two Sukkot concerts in Israel, one in Haifa that drew 3,000 participants and one at Yad Eliyahu Stadium in Tel Aviv that attracted 10,000 people.

  7. Baruch Levine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baruch_Levine

    The title song, which took him ten minutes to write, [7] has become a relative classic in the Orthodox Jewish world. Like many of Levine's hits, it is a heartfelt tune with a rising crescendo. [ 7 ] On his second album, Chasan Hatorah , Levine performed a medley of his compositions that other performers had made famous.

  8. Yossi Green - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yossi_Green

    Yossi Green (born 1955) [1] [2] is a Hasidic Jewish composer of contemporary Jewish religious music. As of 2024 he had written more than 1000 melodies [3] in the genres of pop music, classical music, liturgical music, Hasidic music, and show tunes. His songs have appeared on more than 120 albums and CDs.

  9. Zamir Chorale of Boston - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zamir_Chorale_of_Boston

    Zamir strives to develop future leaders in Jewish choral music. The Mary Wolfman Epstein Conducting Fellowship provides funding for young conductors to study Jewish choral music with Joshua Jacobson. [5] Graduates of the program have gone on to conduct choirs of their own in Boston and beyond. Zamir also mentors other Jewish community choruses ...