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Chag Purim
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A traditional song to celebrate the festival of Purim. Chag Purim is played on the 30-string Lyre.
piano spiritual sacred relaxing jewish peaceful meditation yoga alangoldbergmusic
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Alan Goldberg Music - Including Lyre and piano based Kabbalah music to relax the soul and prepare for Shabbat, meditation, and introspection.
The challenge of creating instrumental music that communicates a deep spiritual connection led Alan naturally to the Jewish musical tradition of the niggun the wordless tune. Instead of the traditional wordless singing of melodies, he employs the lyre, an instrument deeply rooted in the Jewish tradition and associated with holiness and spirituality from antiquity, as well as piano. “Bringing the sound of the lyre back into the consciousness of people in order to create spiritual movement is one of the driving forces behind my music,” Alan says. While the wellspring of the music is from a Jewish perspective, the sense of yearning in the music is accessible to ”seekers” of all faiths. A piano and keyboard player for many years, including a stint in Austin Pop-Rock band “The Damage Project”, Alan released his solo piano CD “Small Acts” in 2001 as music to prepare the mind and soul for the Sabbath. Music that helps to relax people and get them in touch with their spiritual side is important, especially in these tense times. "It’s not uncommon for my music to be used in ways that allow it to find it’s way into a person’s consciousness when their guard is down,“ Alan explains. “That’s the most effective time to do soul work.” So it’s not surprising that Alan’s music has been used by therapy, massage, and healing groups to help in relaxation and meditation exercises, made its way into soundtracks for student films, in radio advertisements, and onto Jewish-oriented radio stations. "A song from my first album "Fuel For the Fire" ended up as background music for some TV college basketball highlights." Alan muses. "Now that's a novel approach to spirituality." "Ultimately it's about a connection to the divine", Alan says. "Many people define their day, and their lives, by the things that distract them from what really makes them happy. If a little bit of music can help to center someone, to remind them of what their true source of meaning is, and I can contribute to that, then I've done what I'm supposed to do."
Song Info
Genre
Alternative Indie
Author
Traditional
Rights
2007
Uploaded
March 03, 2007
Track Files
MP3
MP3 1.1 MB 192 kbps 1:09
Story behind the song
Purim, Festival of Lots, the only time when ribaldry and license were encouraged as examples of proper behavior, arrives on the 14th day of Adar. Adar is the month that precedes Nisan, when Jews celebrate the liberation from slavery in Egypt. The whole story of Purim is that of a miracle in which the hand of G-d was evident only through nature. It requires our investigative qualities to uncover it. King Achasverous's anger and the subsequent execution of his wife, Queen Vashti. The swift rise of Hamen to power. The unexplainable hatred of Hamen towards the Jews and the subsequent decrees to kill all Jews. Then the overturn of the decrees and the execution of Hamen. All of these events, and more, as written in the Megilla Esther, are all seemingly natural events. But that is the lesson of the Megilla Esther. Not all miracles are obvious suspensions of nature. Miracles can be embedded in nature. This is the lesson of Purim. It is for us to investigate into our own lives to see the miracles that have come into our lives.
Lyrics
Chag Purim, Chag Purim, chag gadol la Yehudim. Masechot v'raashanim, zemirot v'rakadim. Hava narisha, raash, raash, raash. Hava narisha - raash, raash, raash - b'raashanim. The festival of Purim, the festival of Purim, a great festival for the Jews. Masks and noisemakers, songs and dancing. Let's make noise - noise, noise, noise - with noisemakers.
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