klezmer

listen to the pronunciation of klezmer
Englisch - Englisch
A Jewish folk musician
A type of popular Jewish folk music especially associated with Ashkenazi cultures
{i} Jewish folk music that originated in Eastern Europe as a combination of cantorial songs accompanied by violin and flute music (and later clarinet and other wind instruments as well)
klezmer music
(Yiddish; "vessel of song") Traditional music played by professional musicians (klezmorim) in the Jewish ghettos of eastern Europe, especially for weddings and other ceremonies. The klezmer tradition has its roots in medieval Europe. By the 19th century its style was well-developed, influenced not only by the liturgical music of the synagogue (which allows only unaccompanied singing), but also that of the local non-Jewish cultures. It is primarily lively dance music. Klezmer ensembles have varied considerably; in the U.S., where a klezmer revival began in the 1980s, a typical band consists of four to six musicians playing some combination of violin, clarinet, trumpet, trombone, tuba, accordion, double bass, and percussion
Türkisch - Türkisch
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klezmer

    Silbentrennung

    klez·mer

    Aussprache

    Etymologie

    () From Yiddish כּלי־זמיר (klezmer), from Hebrew כְּלֵי זֶֽמֶר (k'léi zémer, “musical instruments”).
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