Jeff Warschauer
Item Information
- Title:
- Jeff Warschauer
- Description:
-
Jeff Warschauer was interviewed by Pauline Katz at KlezKamp in the Catskills on December 28, 2010. Jeff begins his interview with a careful outline of his family’s history. His father’s side came from Poland and Latvia; and, his maternal Latvian grandmother often spoke Yiddish. His mother’s side, with which he had a closer relationship, came from Germany. They were an orthodox family, but, as Jeff points out, in the German way which meant being fully observant, but very present in the current world. Jeff grew up in Newton, Massachusetts, right outside of Boston. He describes how growing up his connection to both Jewish and Yiddish culture was paradoxical: his father was an atheist and they never went to shul, but his childhood was filled with stories of life in Europe, and his maternal grandparents kept a kosher home and shabbes. Though Jeff never had a bar mitzvah as a child, he spent most of his younger years reading a lot of books that dealt with Jewish themes; and, it is in this way that he got his sense of Jewish culture. Jeff then details how his interest in music grew. His grandmother and mother, he remembers, often sang German folk music. He, too, began playing music at a young age, learning recorder, harmonica, ukulele, guitar, and trumpet, and later he began playing mandolin and singing. Jeff played in many bands, and was a professional musician by the age of 17 when he was playing gigs and giving music lessons. It wasn’t until he was 18, however that he began receiving formal musical training. The second half of the interview focuses on Jeff’s training at The New England Conservatory, and his subsequent interest in Yiddish and Jewish music. He often remarks on how he felt that playing Jewish music filled a gap he had always felt missing in his life. The latter half of the interview slips in and out of stories from The New England Conservatory, Jeff’s newfound interest in Jewish life and law, and of course, the story of how he met his wife, Deborah Strauss. The interview ends with Jeff’s ruminations on the Yiddish revival across the Americas and Europe and his own work in graduate school as he works to become a cantor. He ends the interview advising musicians, yiddishists, and those interested in Yiddish culture alike to “learn the language of what you’re working with…learn the rudiments…but don’t lose your 21st century self”. Learn more about the Wexler Oral History Project: http://www.yiddishbookcenter.org/tell-your-story To cite this interview: Jeff Warschauer Oral History Interview, interviewed by Pauline Katz, Yiddish Book Center's Wexler Oral History Project, KlezKamp 2010, December 28, 2010. Video recording, http://archive.org/details/JeffWarschauer28december2010YiddishBookCenter ( [date accessed] )
- Creator:
- Yiddish Book Center (Christa)
- Date:
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December 28, 2010
- Format:
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Film/Video
- Location:
- Yiddish Book Center
- Collection (local):
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Oral Histories
- Subjects:
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Career and Professional Life
Education
Jewish education
Religion and ritual
Synagogue
Shul
Temple
Klezmer
Music
Song
Singing
United States
Yiddish learning
Yiddish language
Jewish Identity
Yiddish scene
Yiddish speaker
Immigration
Migration
Holocaust
Jewish professions
Yiddish Book Center
National Yiddish Book Center
Wexler Oral History Project
Nybc
Ybc
Yiddish
Jewish culture
Jeff Warschauer
KlezKamp
- Link to Item:
- https://www.yiddishbookcenter.org/collections/oral-histories/interviews/woh-fi-0000094
- Terms of Use:
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Rights status not evaluated.
Contact host institution for more information.
- Language:
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English