SOUNDTRACK: SHIRIM KLEZMER ORCHESTRA-Klezmer Nutcracker (1998).

I love this klezmer version of Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker.
The first 7 songs of the disc are the popular, quickly recognizable melodies from the ballet. But each song has been klezemerfied–which means minor keys and clarinets and spirited dances that are really peppy.
So even though the musicianship is top-notch, there’s plenty of humor here. As this review puts it
It combines the zany wit of a Spike Jones with the class and craft of a Duke Ellington and recasts the Nutcracker as a Hannukah classic with images of a dancing Latkes Queen and marching Macabees.
The humor even extends to the titles:
A Klezmer Nutracker
- Kozatsky ’till You Dropsky
- Dance of the Latkes Queens
- March of the Macabees
- Araber Tants
- Dance of the Dreydls
- Waltz of the Rugalah
The rest of the disc is made up of Other Klezmer Classics. Despite the abundance of Satie, these songs don’t quite do it for me. They are fine, but Gustav’s Wedding and Romanian Rhapsody are a bit too long. Although Hungarian Goulash is wonderful
Perhaps I just prefer the songs with which I’m familiar. Having said that, the second half is full of very good klezmer, so don’t dismiss it outright.
- Gustav’s Wedding 4:25
- Romanian Rhapsody by G. Enesco 4:40 (see, these two are too long)
- Gnossienne 1 by E. Satie
- Gnossienne 2 by E. Satie
- Gnossienne 3 by E. Satie
- Hungarian Goulash (based on Brahms)
- Nekhome–Solace (after “Prelude 4,” Chopin)
- Turk in American
- Russian Bulgar
- Gymnopedie 3 by E. Satie
[READ: July 9, 2017] 100 Girls
I really enjoyed this book (first in a series apparently), and was about to say it’s really good for an Orphan Black-type premise, and then I saw that it came out in 2005–many many years before Orphan Black. So, three cheers for the originality then.
The book begins with Sylvia waking up from a nightmare. Right off the bat the drawing style is notable–Todd Demong’s style is really interesting–angular and exaggerated but not “cartoony,” the proportions and angles make the story more hyper-real than cartoony, which is pretty great.
When she wakes up, she hears her parents talking about her…how she has changed and become more difficult. Her dad blames it on her being a teenager, but her mom thinks its something more. As she walks to school with her friends, we see that a car is doing surveillance on her. (more…)






