Klezmer clarinetist Moussa Berlin plays Kale Bazetsn camera1
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- Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
- A very spesial klezmer event happend in Jerusalem (2 Sep 08) to honor Moshe (Moussa) Berlin for his fiftieth anniversary of klezmer activity. Many klezmers participated the event, and this is one of the clips.
Why have I only just discovered this. Wonderful music!! Much love from Ireland!
I don't think, it can get better than this. Klezmer at its absolute best, so joyful and heartwarming.
magnifique, immenses musiciens, quel bonheur de les écouter, et comme ils sont beaux.
Beauty of simplicity.
Brings out a yddishe taam.
The flower of yesteryear. No need for a big band with a lot of noise.
Some Klezmer clarinet piece has a dance feel to it but this sounds like a person telling a story. A story of peace and happiness with a happy ending in a world of kind coexistence. Thanks These are the masters.
This music, this clarinet style, is new to me, but it is fantastic! I will seek more, and then try to emulate this style when I practice.
This is so beautiful!My heart is melting!❤Longing...🕊
Thank you
I love you guys! much love from Kurdistan
Молодцы !!! Старшее поколение но молодым музыкантам похоже за ними не угнаться !
Bright and beautiful! I felt at one with the ceremony. Thank you.
Simply beautiful. The real stuff.
Thanks.
I had never known an instrument could play with your emotions, I've only in recent years discovered the clarinet, and here it's being played at it's best.
So true. Wonderful violinist also.
en días de encierro por prevención del coronavirus qué bueno es disfrutar de un momento de alegría. Cada sonrisa vale oro
So beautiful! Thank you thank you!
Esta música te contagia la alegría y a su vez forma una atmósfera de paz :)
Musica Simpatico e Allegretto Melanchonico che Va Sotto La pelle grazie
I love it! Baruch ha Shem!!
Thank you
Nice duet! Guetto's lost memories alive! Dreams comming true!
Adorable y hernosa musica magia que alegra los corazones
Fabulous!!
desde Barcelona, muchas gracias por mantener el judaísmo con música, gracias.
Thank you
Gratulálok, csodálatos muzsika!
Pulsating and rhythmic. Klezmer at its best.
הכי טוב שיש
משה מוסא ברלין
קלייזמר מרגש מנגן נפלא
Very, very nice!
4:23 a 4:43 !!! Que coisa mais linda !!! Deus vos abençoe !!!
Beautiful. My heart..
Der Klarinettist sieht aus wie Moses und seine Musik ist göttlich!
יפה, יפה שיר תודה לכולם
מושלם..תודה רבה לך.
יפה שיר..
Rather nice!
וואו, תודה רבה לך.
ЗАМЕЧАТЕЛЬНО! Спасибо!
Love it
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤trop beau ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
sehr schön
Spitze, einfach Meisterhaft
נהדר
fantastico tocan como angeles es como si uno estuviera en una limpieza espiritual asi siento yo al danzar
Thank you
amen
sweet!
Klasse
tov meod!
hola, es un clarinete o es un oboe?
clarinete
@xiguaca12
Thank you
TOo bad the Clarinet mic was located at the bell...which was why it sounded so thin and whimpy.
EMPIRE ENTERTAINMENT & EVENTS that is the best sound I was able to get in the condution there. Try to hear camera2 may be it will sound better
You are right, but it was recorded at the hall and not in the studio.
schaurig schön
+Joachim Smolka
Thank you
😎👍
That clarinet sound is AWEFUL !!
Your critic is aweful.
And this sound is one of world's different clarinet's sounds,like new orlean,turkish,choro sounds ..
… to whom?
When did gandalf start playing the clarinet?
When Lazar Wolf left the butcher shop to play the fiddle.
Stupid comment
Hava Nagila /Arthur Banaszkiewicz
"Moussa" Berlin?? Are you for real?? His name is MOSHE. Moshe, alright? Moussa... Can't believe it...
Israeli klezmer is a fusion of ashkenazi and s'phardi traditions: "Moshe" is yiddish/ashkenazi; "Moussa" is ladino/s'phardic.
And of course, fully Yiddish should be "Moyshe".
Well, I don't think Mr BERLIN is spharadi, so... Secondly, cases of Spharadim called Moussa instead of Moshe are VERY rare. Maybe among Mizrahim, cause those living in Arab countries were totally of Arab culture. Very few Maghrebi Jews (which are Spharadim, not Mizrahim) prevailed Moussa over Moshe, or Moïse (the French version for this name).
Most of the "Sephardim" in Israel are in fact Mizrakhim. The terms are messy anyway. "Ethnically", the Sephardim are only the descendants of the Spanish Jews, and thus distinct from the Mizrakhim (Ladino vs. Judeo-Arabic); in terms of minhagim, however, they mostly share the same traditions, thus one single "Sephardic" chief rabbi in Israel.
Most of the Maghrebi Jews are Mizrakhi, not Sephardi. However, even those boundaries can be fluid. Moshe ben Maimon (Maimonides), for instance, was Sephardi, but escaped Spain as a teenager, ended up in Cairo, and wrote in Judeo-Arabic (along with Arabic and rabbinical Hebrew). He may, or may not, have spoken Ladino at home.
In any case, he seems to be called "Moussa" all over the place, not just here.
oh my yahweh this yid sure can play
4:02 !
Qaqq
Bons musiciens malheureusement desservis par un enregistrement plutôt déficient
benim adım ebruli
nichts schöner