Zorn Defines Radical Jewish Culture

Anyone into “Jewish” music runs into Tzadik’s Radical Jewish Culture label at one point or another. For me, my first encounter was Jamie Saft’s horrifying industrial document Breadcrumb Sins (my parents bought it for me because of the word ‘Jewish’ on the cover). Since then I’ve been obsessed with everything from Jewlia Eisenberg’s Charming Hostess, to Ayelet Rose Gottlieb’s brilliant label debut last year. Recently (for me, I was just tipped off to it), John Zorn updated the Tzadik webpage with a long explication of his views on Radical Jewish Culture.

The series is an ongoing project. A challenge posed to adventurous musical thinkers. What is jewish music? What is its future? If asked to make a contribution to jewish culture, what would you do? Can jewish music exist without a connection to klezmer, cantorial or yiddish theatre? All of the cds on the tzadik RJC series address these issues through the vision and imagination of individual musical minds.

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One Response to “Zorn Defines Radical Jewish Culture”

  1. [...] much for the lack of Tzadik releases on undomondo. Borah Bergman’s return to ’s Radical Jewish Culture Series after six years is one of 2009’s first important releases. Bergman’s “modern-day series of [...]


    undomondo » Borah Bergman Trio « DEEPGOA’s Electronic Sessions · April 9th, 2009 at 10:00 pm

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"I may attack a certain point of view which I consider false, but I will never attack a person who preaches it. I have always a high regard for the individual who is honest and moral, even when I am not in agreement with him. Such a relation is in accord with the concept of kavod habriyot, for beloved is man for he is created in the image of God." —Rav Joseph Soloveitchik

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