A Year to Remember in Jewish Music Students of • the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion School of Music receive individual and group prac- tice in cantorial music at daily chapel services. * * * By EPHRAIM GOLDMAN (Copyright, 1951, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) In time to come, 1951 will be and music director at Temple a year to remember in Jewish Israel in Lawrence, N. Y., and music. This June the Hebrew a member of the faculty of the Union School of Sacred Music in Julius Hartt Musical Foundation New York, the only school for of Hartford, Conn. The school has set itself the cantors in the world, will gradu- ate the first class of cantors to task of encouraging Jewish mu- be trained in a school on Amer- sicians to take their rightful lean soil. places as synagogue organists- In the three years since the choir directors. It is attempting school was organized by the He- to give professional standing to brew Union College-Jewish In- service in the synagogue, which stitution of Religion under the is dependent today for the most administration of President Nel- part on non-Jewish organists, son Glueck a n d through the . who are proficient organists, efforts of Dr. Eric Werner, pro - but have no background in Jew- fessor of Jewish Music, and Dr. ish tradition or Jewish music. Preserves Cantorial Music Abraham N. Frarizblau, dean of Now an established training the school, it has gone far to- ground for cantors, the school ward fulfilling its objectives. is beginning to fulfill another Fills Gap A primary incentive for the founding of the school was the need to fill the gap :eft by the Nazi destruction of the great European centers of Jewish sac- red music and the dispersion of creators and teachers of Jewish liturgical music. Like the European schools it succeeds, it trains cantors under a faculty of specialists. The cus- tomary practice of learning un- der apprenticeship to one cantor has proved inadequate, only the rare cantor having complete equipment for such a teaching task—which certainly includes sufficient understanding of the devotional texts, expert musi- cianship, knowledge of the history of music, a good voice and the ability to bring out the best in his student, as well as a thorough mastery of the tradi- tional melodies of the syna- gogues. . The school, an integral part of the Hebrew Union College-Jew- ish Institute of Religion of Cin- cinnati and New York, provides a three-year course of study which includes History of Jewish Music and Liturgy, Tradi- tional Synagogue Chants (Nu- sach and Chazanuth), Cantilla- tion, C h o r al Ensemble and Conducting, Harmony, Improvis- ation and other music studies and also education, school adminis- tration, Hebrew, Jewish history. Bible and Judaism. . Under an outstanding faculty represent- ing all sections of Judaism, it trains cantors for service in Or- thodox, Conservative and Reform. Congregations. Requirements for Admission Because a survey by the He- brew Union School revealed that few congregations can afford to engage both a cantor and a director of the synagogue re- ligious school, the curriculum of the school has been organized to give cantorial students train- ing in education to equip them to serve as cantor-educators. Applicants for admission to the full program are required to demonstrate that they have good voices, a well-rounded mu- sical education, a fair Jewish background and a good person- ality. Train Organists, Directors The school has among its plans the introduction of several fields of specialized training to expand its services to the Jewish cominunity. The most recent addition to the curriculum is a course of st7.dy fo,r organists and choir direc- tors to be initiated this fall under the supervision of Dr. Isadore E.Y.reecl, organist, choir director of its important objectives—the preservation and publication of the best in Jewish liturgical mu- sic. A first volume of the works of the distinguish edCan- tor Katchko is being prepared now for appearance this spring. Cantor Katchko, father of a student in the Hebrew Union School of Sacred Music and cantor at Temple Anshe Chesed. New York, is a famous teacher of cantors. Perhaps the best tribute to the rightness of the decision to found the Hebrew Union School of Sacred Music lies in the fact that cantors like Adolph Katch- ko and Solomon Sternberg are sending their sons to the school for training. Six students in the school are sons of cantors, three are grandsons of cantors, and one is the son and grandson of cantors. Students of the school have been in great demand during the past three years as part- time student-cantors in regular congregational posts, a n d as cantors on the High Holy days. Many of them have continued to appear in recitals alone and in choral groups, and in musical programs for organl'zations like the United Jewish Appeal and Hadassah and fraternal societies. Most of the members of the senior class, which will be grad- uated in June, already have been spoken for by leading American congregations. Sacred Music A Treasure While the Reform Jewish movement has taken the lead in safeguarding the continuity, the dignity and the purity of Jewish sacred music, it has pro- ceeded on the principle that the tradition of Jewish synagogual music is the common treasure of all Israel.. The school feels that it should be open alike to all, whether their origin or chosen field of service is Orthodox, Con- servative or Reform, and that allover 48—THE JEWISH NEWS Friday, April 20, 1951 every cantorial student - should be trained in all three rituals. The only school for cantors in the world, the Hebrew Union School of Sacred Music has an enormous task and a sacred ob- ligation to serve K'lal Yisroel. c reetirtgi to all our many friends Robinson Furniture Co. 1420 Washington Blvd. Also operating Robinson's Eco- nomy Store, 709 East Vernor Highway BUT NOT CON- NECTED WITH ANY OTHER STORE. HOLI AY GREETINGS from SAMS, INC. RANDOLPH WOODWAR AND AT MONROE CAMPUS 'MMUS