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Surprising Finds

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Download links and information about Surprising Finds by Metropolitan Klezmer. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to World Music genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:02:39 minutes.

Artist: Metropolitan Klezmer
Release date: 2003
Genre: World Music
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:02:39
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Uncle Moses' Wedding Dance 2:13
2. Terkisher Navratilova 4:52
3. Ot Azoy Neyt a Shnayder 4:07
4. Pick a Pocket or Two 2:35
5. Shpil Du Fidl, Shpil 3:20
6. Harei At (featuring Phillip Karpel) 1:16
7. Soothsayer Taxim 1:14
8. Tailor's Sher 3:09
9. Striver's Sher 1:32
10. Der Dish-washer (featuring Phillip Karpel) 1:08
11. Szol a Kakas Mar (live!) 3:59
12. Dreaming Wizard 2:54
13. Dray Shvester 3:22
14. Kinder Yorn (featuring Phillip Karpel) 0:32
15. Howie's Doyna / No. 2 Freylekh 4:35
16. Abi Gezunt Medley (live!) 7:58
17. Der Milner's Trern (featuring Phillip Karpel) 0:54
18. Blue Doyna Reprise 1:07
19. Shadkhn Tango / Rumanian Medley (live!) 11:33
20. Moses' Morning After (featuring Maurice Schwartz) 0:19

Details

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There are better-known American klezmer bands, but fame doesn't necessarily mean the same as quality, and Metropolitan Klezmer are up there with the very best musically. Their third release, Surprising Finds, is also their most daring, and most varied, where they not only delve deeper into their Yiddish roots, but also Jewish Socialism, once a major force in the U.S., but long since vanished. And so, alongside recordings of Deborah Karpel's grandfather, and old live tunes (including "Howie's Doyna & Hora" from 1994), there's a remarkable reworking on the Broadway standard "Pick a Pocket or Two," reworked as a Balkan brass gem, while "Soviet Yiddish Theater Suite" digs back into history to show how Yiddish culture flourished briefly in the Soviet Union. As much as involving listeners with some fabulous music (just hear the beautiful "Dreaming Wizard," for example), the band is also intent on making connections to the past — all the way down to a very well-thought-out CD booklet. Come for the music and you'll stay for the history lesson — and enjoy it just as much.