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Friday, March 8, 2013
Welcoming Shabbat With Beautiful Melodies: "Yedid Nefesh"
The Shabbat Song Project is an Israeli effort to spread the light of Shabbat, with popular singers performing traditional Shabbat melodies with new and eclectic arrangements. The arrangers and singers deserve a lot of credit for their creativity and use of a wide range of instruments and musical styles to present in a new light songs that we usually hear only inside a synagogue.
We intend to bring you a few of their beautiful renditions on Fridays, when we prepare to welcome Shabbat. The first in this series is Yedid Nefesh, a piyyut (poem) usually sung on Friday night just before the Kabbalat Shabbat (Welcoming Shabbat) service begins.
According to Wikipedia, this beautiful poem is commonly attributed to the sixteenth century kabbalist, Rabbi Elazar ben Moshe Azikri (1533-1600), who first published it in Sefer Charedim (published in Venice 1601), but Azikri did not claim authorship of it and there have been other suggested authors (e.g. Judah Halevi, or Israel Nagara). The Hebrew Manuscripts at Cambridge University Libraries by Stefan C. Reif (1997, page 93) refers to an appearance of Yedid Nefesh in the Commentary On the Book of Numbers by Samuel ben David ben Solomon, a manuscript dated to about 1438—long before Azikri's birth. Azikri's philosophy centered around the intense love one must feel for God, a theme that is evident in this piyyut. The first letters of each of the four verses make up the four letter name of God, known in English as the tetragrammaton.
The artists appearing in this video are Ilan Damari, Roi Levy, Nadav Bachar, Rabbi Oded David, Tamir right, Neria Moyal, Shahar Ariel, Ehud Ariel, Eyal Maoz, Yaniv Ahiel, Ofer Shechtman, Omer Horvitz, Ronen Tessie, Israel Kasif, and Michael Michaeli.
Enjoy and Shabbat Shalom!
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Thank you,Al. What a wonderful idea to bring us lovely melodies to welcome Shabbat!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. Perfect way to get in the ruach Shabbat. Keep em coming.
DeleteReb Moshe
Obviously something went wrong in the transmission of this message, as evidenced by the printing of the message and the fact that the picture did not come through. However, the lovely music did come through, and I enjoyed it very much, thank you.
ReplyDeleteI sing this melody every week. Still, I'm playing the recording over and over as my workday moves toward Shabbat. Shabbat shalom, v'todah rabbah!
ReplyDeleteI love to listen to Shabbos music on Friday. Gets me in the Shabbos mood. Beautiful music.
ReplyDeleteKol hakavod !
ReplyDeleteYou bring Eretz Israel ruach la tfuztut !
Dash le Rav Oded.
Rabinessa Liora