The Social Life of Jewish Music Records from 1948 Czechoslovakia by Hazzan Josef Weiss

Authors

  • Veronika Seidlová

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14712/12128112.2391

Keywords:

Cantorial records, ethnomusicology, hazzan, multi-sited ethnography, social life of things

Abstract

This article traces transnational “life” trajectories of two rare Jewish religious music records from 1948 Communist Czechoslovakia and of their main performer Josef Weiss (ca. 1912, Veľké Kapušany – 1985 Netanya), who was a hazzan (cantor) in synagogues in Vienna, Budapest, Prague, Jerusalem, Ramat Gan, Manchester, and New York, but has remained mostly unknown to music history. It shows how these two 78-rpm records stand at the core of Weiss’s grandson’s family / music / memory project, which has revealed and pre­pared to reissue 52 audio recordings to preserve his grandfather’s legacy. While following these and other digitized and technologically modified recordings of Weiss on their recent path between the Czech Republic, Israel, Hungary, and the US, the article sheds light on how this case fits into the broader framework of the social life of things and the context of musical remembrance. Already put to use during the life-cycle rituals of Weiss’s children and grandchildren, as well as in a museum exhibition – this family project constructs a fragment of a Jewish sonic past for the present needs of its actors, while being entangled with the current practice of Jewish memory institutions, as well as with the activities of private record collectors and of one ethnomusicologist (myself).

Author Biography

Veronika Seidlová

earned her PhD in anthropology at the Faculty of Humanities (FHS), Charles University in Prague (2016). Her dissertation is a multi-sited ethnographical study of a transnational flow of Vedic mantras from India to the Czech Republic. She is currently employed as an assistant professor at the FHS, Charles University in Prague. Veronika’s articles have been published in the following journals: Journal of Urban Culture Research, Národopisná revue, and Urban People. She co-edited Music – Memory – Minorities: Between Archive and Activism (with Zuzana Jurková, 2020), and is also an author of the audio-text publication “The Forgotten Voice of the Jeruzalémská Synagogue in Prague” published by the Jewish Museum in Prague with the support of the Phonogramm-Archive of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (with Alexander Knapp, 2008). She was curator and head of the Center for Documentation of Popular Music and New Media in the National Museum – Czech Museum of Music.

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Published

2022-07-01

How to Cite

Seidlová, V. (2022). The Social Life of Jewish Music Records from 1948 Czechoslovakia by Hazzan Josef Weiss. Lidé města, 24(2), 225-262. https://doi.org/10.14712/12128112.2391

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Section

Articles