Oy To The World - A Klezmer Christmas

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Oy To The World - A Klezmer Christmas album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 27:58

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This is Amazing

aphonicbabel

It really is, it wasn't what I was expecting to find but I'm so glad to have found it truly a gem.

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Oy to the World

4HARK

I have a rather large collection of Christmas cds.This one knocks me out.I never knew there was such a thing as Klezmer renditions of Christmas music until I heard an arrangement played by a band that my son is in so I looked it up on emusic and found Oy To The World which is now way on top of my list of favorite Christmas albums.

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wow this is great

mikl-em

For anyone who's a fan of Klezmer and has a developed sense of irony, this is a real treat. All instrum except for the hilarious "Santa Gey Gezunderheit".

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mad as a hatter

demon39

funny stuff,play it when you are drunk and cue some amazing alternative dance moves

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What a hoot

tribalman

Quite funny in that tongue-in-cheek Yiddish way. Mr. Adam Greenberg's review is right on the mark. The music is melodic and wonderfully executed. This one is going to find itself into more than a few stockings this year.

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They Say All Music Guide

An odd coalition of music in theory, but with beautiful execution. The Klezmonauts, a somewhat avant-garde (at times) klezmer group in their own right, have taken it upon themselves on this album to rework a number of Christmas songs (here’s where the theory gets sticky — klezmer is traditional Jewish music). On top of the obvious discrepancy in religion of the music, other bits are thrown in from time to time: surf guitar helps power through “Little Drummer Boy,” a bit of Ennio Morricone’s spaghetti western in “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen,” Gershwin in “Jingle Bells,” and Cream’s “Sunshine of Your Love” in “Good King Wenceslas.” The vigor of klezmer actually works exceptionally well for the music (at least the selections that they decided to pursue). One original work also appears, co-written by Mark Pierce and Paul Libman, the group leader: “Santa Gey Gezunderheit.” The instrumentation of the klezmer group works well for the music, as does the ability of the performers. The music is jumping inordinately, and that’s a good thing for the case. It’s traditional Christmas music that forces the listener to tap their feet. Pick it up as a fan of klezmer or as one of the innumerable Christmas albums available, but make sure to pick it up. – Adam Greenberg

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