Music Telling Our History
Throughout our history, songs and poems were written to eternalize joyous and tragic events in our history. This trend began with the shira sung by our ancestors at Yam Suf after Par’oh and his armies were swallowed by the sea. Centuries later, when B’nei Yisroel were being led out of Eretz Yisroel during the destruction of the Beis Hamikdash, Yirmiyah the prophet wrote the Megillas Eichah. Throughout the generations, more Kinnos were written as tzaros struck our people.
With the advent of musical recording, it became possible to immortalize these moments in history, either while the event was occuring or shortly thereafter. Most notably, eras and events captured in song included the Holocaust, the establishment of the State of Israel and the tribulations encountered, the heart-rending saga of the Jews stuck behind the “Iron Curtain” of communist U.S.S.R, and the Ba’al Teshuvah movement.
Holocaust
While these songs were not written and recorded during the Holocaust, they are equally precious, as they were written by the post-Holocaust generation.
The childrens’ choir are remarkable in this aspect. The raw emotion and passion is profound, and cannot be found in 21st century choirs such as Yeshiva Boys Choir, New York Boys Choir, or even the modern reincarnation of Miami Boys Choir. The often plaintive emotion in the voices of children singing in Pirchei, JEP, and Amudei Shaish reflects the personal experience these children have had with the Holocaust, through true golus. You can tell that these children have lived the Holocaust through their survivor parents and grandparents; it's a quality which must be heard in order to appreciate. These were the children whose parents had fresh wounds (emotional and physical) inflicted by Nazi Germany, who lost uncles, aunts, and grandparents to the Nazis. This was a generation who felt the pain of the Holocaust on their own skin. In many of the songs, you can feel these experiences in the voices of the children.
Ani Ma’amin - Pirchei Agudah
Ani Ma’amin - JEP
V’nikeisi
A Sukkeleh - rec by The Rabbis Sons
B’shetzef Ketzef (Flam)
The Iron Curtain
Ask anyone who is the first artist that comes to mind when bringing up the Iron Curtain, and the answer will undoubtedly be Mordechai Ben David - MBD. However, there were quite a few artists who wrote and recorded heart-rending songs about a people who were, at the time, literally prisoners in the USSR just for being Jews. A people who weren't allowed to learn about or practice Judaism. Individuals who were imprisoned and tortured for Jewish activism.
Let My People Go - MBD
Someday - MBD
Hold On - MBD
Dear Nikolai - JEP
In the Mountains - JEP
T’ka B’shofar/From Town to Town - JEP
No Jew Will Be Left Behind - Avraham Fried
Ufduyei Hashem - Neginah Orchestra/Rockoff
Keeping Watch - Simchatone
Boris - Rocky Zweig
On the Wings of an Eagle - Ruach Revival
Dreams Come True (Abie Rotenberg)
The Forgotten Princess - London School of Jewish Song
The State of Israel
Goodbye Golus - Fried
Jerusalem is not For Sale - MBD
The Ba’al Tshuvah Movement
Just One Shabbos - MBD
I’m So Proud to Be a Jew - MBD