Another edition of KlezKanada will take place August 17 to 23 at Camp B'nai Brith in Ste. Agathe and Dr. Hy Goldman, who founded the event with his wife Sandy, could not be more
proud.
Each summer
KlezKanada’s Laurentian Retreat draws people from around the world to Camp B’nai
Brith. On the shores of a calm lake, nestled amongst the beautiful Laurentian mountains,
participants celebrate the tradition, innovation, and continuity of
Jewish/Yiddish culture. Intergenerational, interdisciplinary, and
international, KlezKanada’s Laurentian Retreat has grown into one of the
leading Jewish cultural events in the world. KlezKanada features an all-star
faculty, world-class concerts, and a KlezKabaret that keeps participants singing and dancing late
into the night. There are also films and classes on Jewish history, culture, Yiddish
language, and literature, workshops for instrumentalists, singers, dancers, and
visual artists of all levels, creative programs for the whole family, and so
much more!
Dr. Hy Goldman |
This year
KlezKanada will conclude with its Der Groyser
Kontsert - A Tribute to Theodore Bikel on Sunday evening, August 23 (7:30 p.m.) at Oscar
Peterson Concert Hall in NDG. The evening will showcase four generations of the most highly acclaimed musicians on the
international Jewish music scene – all paying homage to the career of masterful
performer, singer, actor, raconteur and author Theodore Bikel, in
support of the KlezKanada Youth Scholarship Fund.
Born in May of
1924, the legendary Bikel led a unique career
spanning over seven decades. An Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner, he was perhaps best known as Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof, a role he
performed on stage over 2,000 times. As a folksinger and storyteller he recorded over 30 albums and captivated audiences on virtually every
continent. A true Renaissance Man, he viewed his work and life
in terms of survival, saying, “You must explore your roots in the past in order
to pinpoint your place in the present or to be entitled to a future.”
“Bikel was scheduled to appear and
perform at the concert and when I spoke to him in Los Angeles about a month ago
he was looking forward to it, but he was
gravely ill and it was 50/50 whether he would be able to appear in
Montreal,” Dr. Goldman explained. “Well, he died a week later to our sorrow. Incidently
he was a member of KlezKanada’s Board and had already performed in 2007 and
2011.”
Born and raised in Montreal, Dr. Goldman moved to
New York in 1946. Drafted
into the U.S. Army, he was sent to Japan and South Korea before receiving his
discharge 18 months later. The GI Bill of Rights enabled him to attend
university, and it was there, at the University of Illinois at Chicago, that
Goldman began his flirtation with music. He organized musical events, but also
a pep rally that starred Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin.
“I used to be a pretty good
singer, but I realized that singing was not what I wanted to do. I decided to
become a doctor,” Goldman recalled.
Yet the music bug never left him.
In the 1980s, when Goldman was involved with Montreal’s Akiva School, arranging
concerts and other fund-raisers, he brought in Boston’s Klezmer Conservatory
Band. The group played a type of music with which most of the public was still
relatively unfamiliar. He initiated his summer klezmer festival eight years
ago.
Dr. Goldman is an Associate Professor of Paediatrics and Biology at McGill University and an Emergency Room pediatrician at the Montreal Children’s Hospital. KlezKanada, though, is a 12 month obsession leading up to the actual evengt,
“KlezKanada makes Jewish music and the arts accessible to everyone,” says Dr. Goldman. “It gives people a chance to learn about Jewish history and their roots in a contemporary way, and discover who they are.” The curriculum includes world-class concerts, workshops for instrumentalists, singers, dancers and visual artists of all levels, films, literature, language and culture, and children’s and teen programs. When you come to KlezKanada you have a supermarket of activities to choose from.”
Klezmer’s roots date back hundreds of years in Eastern Europe. Itinerant musicians would travel from shtetl to shtetl playing events, Goldman said. There are Romanian, Turkish, Greek and Russian elements in klezmer, but the essential part comes from synagogue music.
“Music is a very important part of the human condition,” Dr. Goldman says. “Ongoing research shows music’s role in the brain. I think music can heal in a way that’s difficult to determine. It provides an atmosphere where that individual is relaxed and less preoccupied with his or her ailments.
Socalled |
The extraordinary line up for August 23, coming together for that one-night-only, includes Grammy award-winning klezmer supergroup The Klezmatics; Montreal's own Yiddish hip-hop sensation Josh Dolgin (aka Socalled); New York's finest post-war klezmer tribute band The Tarras Band; the golden-voiced Shura Lipovsky from The Netherlands;pioneers of the post-Soviet klezmer renaissance, Efim Chorney and Suzanne Ghergus of Moldova; and – pulling it all together as MC – Yiddish author and bon vivant Michael Wex.
Tickets are $50 for the orchestra and balcony and $36 and available at Oscar Peterson Hall Box Office or through Admission.com at 1-855-790-1245. For more information go to www.klezcanada.com.
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