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The Complete Recordings

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Download links and information about The Complete Recordings by Hasidic New Wave. This album was released in 2012 and it belongs to Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, World Music genres. It contains 52 tracks with total duration of 04:30:23 minutes.

Artist: Hasidic New Wave
Release date: 2012
Genre: Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, World Music
Tracks: 52
Duration: 04:30:23
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Buy on iTunes $49.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Satmar Hakafos #6 8:35
2. Sim Shalom 10:05
3. Tzur Mishelo 6:56
4. Last Temptation of Lady L 6:07
5. Eliyahu Hanovi 3:30
6. V'Smachta 3:01
7. Welcome to the McDonald's in Dachau 4:46
8. Debka 5:30
9. Bobover Wedding March 5:40
10. Afinale: "Juba" + Satmar Hakafos #6 Reprise 6:54
11. Seven Blessings From the Highest Priest: Achas 0:30
12. Aks 5:20
13. Seven Blessings From the Highest Priest: Achas Ve-Achas 0:26
14. Hebe Bop 6:48
15. Seven Blessings From the Highest Priest: Achas U-Shitayim 1:50
16. Transcendence/U'Mipney Khara'Eynu 5:56
17. Al-Osfour Al-Majnoun (The Crazy Bird) 8:21
18. Seven Blessings From the Highest Priest: Achas Ve-Sholosh 1:07
19. Ve-Samakhto Dub 9:23
20. Seven Blessings From the Highest Priest: Achas Ve-Arba 1:20
21. Habibi 5:56
22. Seven Blessings From the Highest Priest: Achas Vo-Sheysh 0:32
23. Blues in Exile 3:50
24. Seven Blessings From the Highest Priest: Achas Ve-Khamesh 0:30
25. Men Trinkt Mashke (People Drink Whiskey) 4:27
26. Purple Vishnu 8:10
27. Benigni 5:26
28. Kabalogy 4:28
29. H.W.N. Pt. 1 2:07
30. H.W.N. Pt. 2 2:47
31. Ok Dear, Who? 4:27
32. Amy's Solo 6:10
33. The Frank Zappa Memorial Bris 1:00
34. Burkan Cocek 5:36
35. Satmar Hakafos Nign #3 2:19
36. Giuliani Uber Alles 2:50
37. Waaw Waaw 5:18
38. Yemin Hashem 8:52
39. Bread of Affliction 11:26
40. Sea of Breeds 6:57
41. Frydginator 5:31
42. The Sacred Line 2:34
43. Bo-Peep 6:50
44. Spirit of Jew-Jew 8:27
45. Live In Koln: Overture 1:38
46. Live In Koln: New York Debkas 9:05
47. HNW + Strings: Al-Asfour Al-Majnoun 5:27
48. HNW + Strings: Alef/Fela 9:04
49. Knitting Tants 8:52
50. Hebe-Bop 6:30
51. "Bottle Dance" From Fiddler on the Roof 4:42
52. Holen Tza'adi (To Benefit the Rofeh Cholim Cancer Society) 6:30

Details

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Hasidic New Wave was a group founded in the mid-'90s by saxophonist Greg Wall and trumpeter Frank London. The pair had studied together at the New England Conservatory of Music, and later played together in Hasidic wedding bands to financially support themselves while indulging their love of jazz, avant-garde, klezmer, niggunim, and other musics with various bands in New York on the weekends. Along the way, they found a way to translate the energy of the Hasidic melodies and their love of free jazz, funk, rock, and more, into Hasidic New Wave. The group's other stable members included Aaron Alexander, Fima Ephron, and David Fiuczynski. The band began playing in earnest the same year — 1993 — that John Zorn had founded Tzadik; they instantly fit into his Radical Jewish Culture project, and the rest is history. Included in this beautiful box are all four of the group's original albums — Jews and the Abstract Truth, Psycho-Semitic, Kabalogy, and From the Belly of Abraham (an album issued in collaboration with Alioune Faye and Yakar Rhythms). The fifth disc assembles live and rare recordings. The first two of these eight tracks feature the earliest incarnation of the band with Shlomo Deshet on drums and Bentsi Gaffni on electric bass, playing live in Köln, Germany in 1993. Especially noteworthy is "New York Debkas," for its experiments with tone, mode, and rhythm. The next three cuts also feature Sarah Parkins on violin and Fred Lonberg-Holm on cello. Recorded live at the Knitting Factory, these are tunes of exceptional energy, varying textures, and outstanding group interplay (check HNW + Strings' "Al-Asfour Al-Majnoun"). The final three tunes are unreleased studio recordings with the last quintet with Fiuczynski, Ephron, and Alexander. While any of these selections could have been used on the records they recorded together, it is "Holem Tza'adi" (recorded to benefit the Rofeh Cholim Cancer Society) that stands out for its variation, slow modal opening, and explosive middle section. It is housed in the usual excellent Tzadik packaging, with extensive liner notes (original notes, cover art, etc., are included too). What's most remarkable, however, is how fresh and exciting and forward-thinking this music sounds two decades later and realizing once more how totally influential it has been.