To purchase full-size high fidelity versions of these videos, please contact:In the USA, Stanley Steinberg: sjsteinberg@earthlink.net; (619) 713-3282;Or via Transcontinental Music at www.trancontinentalmusic.com; The Moscow Male Jewish Cappella; www.hasidic-cappella.com; Conductor Alexander Tsaliuk; Soloist Andery Skenderov; Jewish Folk Song in Yiddish, Tum Balalayka, Piano part -- Alexander Velikovskiy, Ekaterinburg, Independence day of Russia, 12.8.08
No one is critiquing any one. I was just stating a fact.By the way, I was taught my Bar Mitzvah by my grandfather who was the president of the Orthodox Rabbis of America for over 16 years. And by the way he was Ashkanazie and not Shephardic.So much for your erroneous theory.
backedbycash 1 month ago
Ellen Applebaum: I' m a passaic/Clifton Jew bar mitzvahed in the 50's. My grandfather was Joseph Rosen, rabbi of Passaic's Chevra Tillim.We pronounced the talllit as tallis.
backedbycash 1 month ago
@backedbycash It's all about the etnicity. In Hebrew the last character is tav. Tav is pronounced by Ashkenazim and people living in Israel (speaking ta "standard Hebrew) pronounce it a T, while Shepardic Jews pronounce Tav usually a S or SH sometimes.
petike009 1 month ago
Cool song.nad need no natonality.....it is internatoinal song
SHALOM
hetq 1 month ago
Um - for us Passaic Jews of the 1950's definitely Tallis!!!!!!!
ellenapplebaum 3 months ago
и не стесняютсо
0i00o 8 months ago
@NakiBest When one's bar mitzvah was 60 years ago, the pronunciation was TALLIS. Next time ask a learned person before critiquing someone.
backedbycash 8 months ago
@backedbycash Um, the word is 'tallit'.
NakiBest 9 months ago
What with talis on the singers? Completely unnecessary and uncalled for. They're not singing a religious song in a temple.
l
backedbycash 10 months ago
@ORUB57
Tumbalalayka is russian-jewish song in yiddish! it has nothing to do with america or usa!
Concordanzus 1 year ago 2