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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.
Vol. 4: Sh'moy Shel Melech (2009) YBC Live! III (2009) (featuring Eli Gerstner, Menucha, Dovid Stein & Yaakov Mordechai Gerstner) Vol. 5: Chanukah (2010) YBC Live! 4 (2011) (featuring Eli Gerstner, Yaakov Mordechai Gerstner & Michoel Pruzansky) Amein: An A Capella Production (2012) Vol. 6: Modeh Ani (Thank You) (2014) Our Greatest Hits Live ...
Perush Makif shel Mori Yosef Qafih: Yosef Qafih: Rambam La'Am: Shmuel Tanchum Rubinstein: Mossad Harav Kook, Jerusalem 1971 Iyyunim BaMishneh Torah LeHaRambam: Jose Faur: Mossad Harav Kook, Jerusalem 1978 Biyur al Mishneh Torah LeRambam: Adin Steinsaltz: Koren Publishers, Jersualem 2017 Chiddushei Rabbeinu Meshulam Dovid Halevi Al HaRambam
An English language book entitled "Kuntres Shmoi Shel Moshiach" [11] [12] was published by Aharon Yaakov Lieberman which provides an in-depth analysis of what the Sages of the Talmud discussed about the possibility of a resurrected Moshiach. The book received several Rabbinic approbations and wide acclaim from all sections of Orthodoxy.
מלך המשיח, מה״מ (melech hamashiach) - the king Moshiach מורינו הרב מרטנבורג, מהר״ם ( Maharam , Moreinu HaRav [Meir bar Baruch] MiRotenburg) - our teacher, the Rabbi [Meir, son of Rabbi Baruch] of Rottenburg; major author of the Tosafot to Rashi on the Talmud , and Ashkenaz posek
Shel Talmy, the music producer known for his collaborations with rockstar bands like The Who and The Kinks, has died. He was 87. According to a report from Sky News on Friday, Nov. 15, Talmy's ...
Elijah of Vilna (1720–1789) worried about the phrasing and warned singers to be careful not to pause between elyon, Most High, and mee-melech, from the king. [5] According to Jacob Zallel Lauterbach (1873-1942) the words ממלך מלכי המלכים are not original. [8] Some versions include melech instead of mi-melech. [9]
From the early 1920s he was an active contributor of poems and essays to major Yiddish periodicals, under the name Melech Ravitch. Moving to Warsaw in 1921, he belonged to Di Chaliastre ("The Gang"), a modernist literary group which included Uri Zvi Greenberg and Peretz Markish . [ 4 ]