Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

New York Noise's invigorating discussion of the limits, unevenness, and incoherencies of culture offers a seminal contribution to the fields of ethnomusicology, musicology, cultural studies, American studies, and Jewish studies.

* Project MUSE *

"New York Noise will certainly be the standard text for fans and scholars of the RJC moment as well as an important reference for those interested in the downtown scene and contemporary Jewish musical practices."

* Journal of the Society for American Music *

A welcome addition to the literature on contemporary Jewish identity politics.

* Jewish Book World *

The book is detailed, well documented, and a fascinating analysis of a musical milieu that was less visible than the neo-klezmer movement . . . Just as valuable as the text is the availability of supplemental audio and video through a free account at ethnomultimedia.org . . . An outstanding study of a fascinating slice of New York culture.

* Library Journal *

Barzel provides plenty of sociohistorical contextualization to root her wider discussion of the role of Jewishly identified music in the downtown scene in New York City in the 1990s. Moreover, her inclusion of audio clips available on the publisher's website provides a soundtrack for critical listening, which is both practical and necessary. The book is expertly detailed in its musicological analysis.

* H-Judaic *

Recommended.

* Choice *

Questions of identity and musical originality are broached and compellingly entwined in Barzel's study, which is highly informative and refreshingly free of the dryness or excessive earnestness that can sometimes blight an account of a 'movement' of this kind.

* Jazzwise *

New York Noise fills an important void in the study of contemporary Jewish music and provides an array of insights into a unique efflorescence of Jewish culture that is sure to stimulate fans and scholars alike.

* AJS Review *

New York Noise only scratches the surface of potential research in this area, but Barzel adroitly tackles the larger questions of Jewish identity that Radical Jewish Culture wrestles with. Essential for Jewish libraries.

* AJL Reviews *

This book is appropriate for all academic collections and for the well informed and curious lay reader who is prepared for a very heavy read. It might easily serve as a textbook for a course on the subject. This book is highly recommended.

* AJL Reviews *

As the first book to tackle RJC in a closely studied manner, Barzel has provided an excellent foundation for future studies, as well as a very high bar by which they will be judged.

* Musaica Judaica *

Table of Contents

Ethnomusicology Multimedia Series Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The Downtown Scene
1. Jewish Music: The Art of Getting it Wrong
2. "Radical Jewish Culture": A Community Emerges
3. From the Inexorable to the Ineffable: John Zorn's Kristallnacht and the Masada Project
4. Queer Dada Judaism: G-d Is My Co-Pilot and the "Inbetween Space"
5. Shelley Hirsch and Anthony Coleman: Music and Memory from the "Nowhere Place"
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index

New York Noise Radical Jewish Music and the

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    £52.70

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    RRP £62.00 – you save £9.30 (15%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 2 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Tamar Barzel

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of New York Noise Radical Jewish Music and the by Tamar Barzel

      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 30/01/2015
      ISBN13: 9780253015501, 978-0253015501
      ISBN10: 0253015502

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      New York Noise's invigorating discussion of the limits, unevenness, and incoherencies of culture offers a seminal contribution to the fields of ethnomusicology, musicology, cultural studies, American studies, and Jewish studies.

      * Project MUSE *

      "New York Noise will certainly be the standard text for fans and scholars of the RJC moment as well as an important reference for those interested in the downtown scene and contemporary Jewish musical practices."

      * Journal of the Society for American Music *

      A welcome addition to the literature on contemporary Jewish identity politics.

      * Jewish Book World *

      The book is detailed, well documented, and a fascinating analysis of a musical milieu that was less visible than the neo-klezmer movement . . . Just as valuable as the text is the availability of supplemental audio and video through a free account at ethnomultimedia.org . . . An outstanding study of a fascinating slice of New York culture.

      * Library Journal *

      Barzel provides plenty of sociohistorical contextualization to root her wider discussion of the role of Jewishly identified music in the downtown scene in New York City in the 1990s. Moreover, her inclusion of audio clips available on the publisher's website provides a soundtrack for critical listening, which is both practical and necessary. The book is expertly detailed in its musicological analysis.

      * H-Judaic *

      Recommended.

      * Choice *

      Questions of identity and musical originality are broached and compellingly entwined in Barzel's study, which is highly informative and refreshingly free of the dryness or excessive earnestness that can sometimes blight an account of a 'movement' of this kind.

      * Jazzwise *

      New York Noise fills an important void in the study of contemporary Jewish music and provides an array of insights into a unique efflorescence of Jewish culture that is sure to stimulate fans and scholars alike.

      * AJS Review *

      New York Noise only scratches the surface of potential research in this area, but Barzel adroitly tackles the larger questions of Jewish identity that Radical Jewish Culture wrestles with. Essential for Jewish libraries.

      * AJL Reviews *

      This book is appropriate for all academic collections and for the well informed and curious lay reader who is prepared for a very heavy read. It might easily serve as a textbook for a course on the subject. This book is highly recommended.

      * AJL Reviews *

      As the first book to tackle RJC in a closely studied manner, Barzel has provided an excellent foundation for future studies, as well as a very high bar by which they will be judged.

      * Musaica Judaica *

      Table of Contents

      Ethnomusicology Multimedia Series Preface
      Acknowledgements
      Introduction: The Downtown Scene
      1. Jewish Music: The Art of Getting it Wrong
      2. "Radical Jewish Culture": A Community Emerges
      3. From the Inexorable to the Ineffable: John Zorn's Kristallnacht and the Masada Project
      4. Queer Dada Judaism: G-d Is My Co-Pilot and the "Inbetween Space"
      5. Shelley Hirsch and Anthony Coleman: Music and Memory from the "Nowhere Place"
      Epilogue
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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