So, apparently Passover’s coming really late this year. Last year it was early. It never seems to come on time. Why is that? Just throwing it out there. Whatever the answer may be, the spring festival’s here and while to many that means one thing, matzah, this holiday has some other great accoutrements
that are sometimes overlooked in favor of their unleavened cousin. Chief among them, for me at least, is the music.
Many seders are full of singing (at least they ought to be), and depending on where families hail from (I mean originally; not Scarsdale, Fairfax, the Upper West Side, etc.) the ceremony may sound vastly different. I happen to be Ashkenazic, Jerusalem born, but the Pesach music that moves me is Sephardic. In that vein, there is no better Pesach album than Yehoram Gaon’s "Songs for Passover in the Sephardic Tradition."
The album was released the same year I was born (1975), but it holds up amazingly well. I’ve mentioned Yehoram Gaon before. Israelis of my age would (and often do) laugh at my affinity for his music (liking him is probably akin to a young’un in the States grooving to Perry Como). And yet, I can’t recommend a Pesach album (or any Jewish holiday record, really) more highly.
Check it out; it’s available here. Another 30 or so Pesach albums and videos can be found for sale here.
One other suggestion. I got my appreciation for this music from my parents (who listened to Yehoram Gaon while I was growing up) and my brother, who’s the music director at Ikar, a new shul in Los Angeles, where I’m also a member. Ikar’s got a few Pesach recordings up on their Web site (full disclosure: my brother performs on them) that I think are great.
May you and yours enjoy the unleavened experience of a lifetime, late as it may be.