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Woody Guthrie's Happy Joyous Hanukkah

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Download links and information about Woody Guthrie's Happy Joyous Hanukkah by The Klezmatics. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to World Music, Traditional Pop Music, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 45:34 minutes.

Artist: The Klezmatics
Release date: 2006
Genre: World Music, Traditional Pop Music, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 12
Duration: 45:34
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Honeyky Hanuka 2:37
2. Happy Joyous Hanuka 3:56
3. Gilad and Ziv's Sirba 2:54
4. Hanuka Bell 3:29
5. (Do The) Latke Flip-Flip 4:03
6. Hanukah Tree 2:27
7. The Many and the Few 6:24
8. Groovy's Freylekhs 3:53
9. Hanuka Gelt 3:12
10. Spin Dreydl Spin 2:34
11. Hanuka's Flame 4:33
12. Hanuka Dance 5:32

Details

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A companion piece to 2006's sublime Wonder Wheel, Happy Joyous Hanukkah, like that album, dips into Woody Guthrie's catalog of recently discovered, previously unrecorded Jewish lyrics, to which the Klezmatics have written new music. Originally released in 2004, Happy Joyous Hanukkah, expanded with four additional songs in this re-release, largely lives up to its name, stacked with uptempo, celebratory, often quite clever tributes to the festive Jewish holiday. Guthrie's playful way with the language is evident from the opening track, the cheerful "Honeyky Hanuka," and onward through much of the album. "Hanuka Gelt" doubles as a counting lesson ("Hanuka, Hanuka, 'leven and seven/Hanuka geltula, dance me to heaven"), while the closing "Hanuka Dance" is just that, even if its lyrical content consists of not much more than a series of name drops of various treats consumed during the holiday. The Klezmatics are the ideal band to bring Guthrie's dormant words to life: vocalist Lorin Sklamberg's crystalline pipes lend a natural merriment to the band's arrangements, and trumpeter Frank London, who crafted the music for most of the songs that Sklamberg didn't, injects an experimentalism into the proceedings without losing sight of tradition. Only one song, "The Many and the Few," for which Guthrie wrote both music and words, might be described as somber, but it's not tedious: with Susan McKeown alternating with Sklamberg on lead vocals, it tells the story of Hanukkah's origin, a tale, it's fair to say, many non-Jews still do not know. And now that they will, there's no reason gentiles shouldn't enjoy this album of Hanukkah songs by the non-Jewish Guthrie as much as, say, one Jewish record producer stated his enjoyment of that other December holiday's songs when he cut one of the season's all-time classics, A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector.