Meijer Broadway Series presents The New Wave THE ODD COUPLE starring Barbara Eden & Rita McKenzie A new front line of women in Jewish music finds acceptance and success. GEORGE ROBINSON Special to the Jewish News J ewish women have been an inte- gral part of the klezmer revival that has been going on since the 1970s. And now, they have stepped to the front of the bandstand, carrying their sisters in other Jewish musical tra- ditions along with them into the spot- light. Just ask Elaine Hoffman Watts, the drummer for KlezMs, a group led by her daughter, trumpeter Susan Sandler. Watts is a third-generation klezmer, like the New York-based Metropolitan Klezmer, whose leader is drummer Eve Sicular. Another sign of changing times on thellezmer scene is the proliferation of bands whose members are all or nearly all women. Mikveh, a spectacularly talented group, draws from the top Jewish music groups working today. The band's personnel include Alicia Svigals on fiddle (Klezmatics), Lauren Brody on accordion, singer Adrienne Cooper and ja77, bassist Nicki Parrott. "What we represent is a moving from that decorous one-girl-per- ' band thing to a front line of women," says Cooper. "We don't .2 exactly understand the effect on the audience, but it seems to bog- o gle their minds to see a front line 4 of women in a band. We're not setting out to do `women's music,' but what it means is there's something that radiates to the audience as female energy, interaction between women players on stage." For many of the women involved in klezmer and other improvi- sational contemporary Jewish music, what's happening is that women's voic- es are being heard. Basya Schechter, the leader of Pharoah's Daughter, a highly acclaimed Brooklyn band that plays a heady mix of Middle Eastern, Chasidic and folk- rock tinged with a klezmer beat (see accompanying article), believes her suc- cess is equivalent to what's happened in the pop world. "Women singer-songwriters are get- ting so much attention in the regular music world. Men have begun most of the waves, but at some point, [other] people have their viewpoint and want some balance," she says. For instrumentalists, however, the sit- uation is a bit different. "Women relate to women in a differ- ent way. Playing with men, I'm more reticent to take the lead," says Susan Sandler of KlezMs. Eve Sicular — in addition to Metropolitan Klezmer, she leads two all-women bands, Isle of Klezbos and Ana and the Tevkas -- says winning acceptance as musicians, and Jewish musicians, is more important than being perceived as "female musicians." Caron Dale, leader of Lox and Vodka, emphatically agrees. "I'm a Jewish musician," she asserts. "The gender is not the issue." Fl Apr. 25 at 7:30 pm, Apr. 26 at 8pm and Apr. 27 at 2 & 8pm There's a new odd couple in town—Felix and Oscar have been transformed into Florence and Olive in Neil Simon's laugh-riot revised production of The Odd Couple— the female version. Ticket Office 586.286.2222 www.MacombCenter.com " daughter of the famed xylo- phonist Jacob Hoffman and the first woman to graduate with a degree in per- cussion from the prestigious Curtis Institute. Remembering her struggles in the 1950s, she said, "They didn't use women musicians. They had girl singers, but not a girl instrumentalist. It was their club, their thing. I wasnt a part of the club. I played when it was my father's job, when he was the leader. Otherwise they did not use me because I was a woman." But all that has changed. For the first time in the history of the form, numerous, predominantly male ldezmer bands are being led by women (as opposed to being fronted by female vocalists), and these klezmerot are instrumentalists first and foremost. Some of the bands have been around a while, like the Wholesale Klezmer Band (out of Western Massachusetts), led by clarinetist/composer Sherry Mayrent; Chicago's Maxwell Street Klezmer Band, led by guitarist Lori Lippitz; and Lox and Vodka, led by Washington, D.C.-based accordionist Caron Dale. Others are of more recent vintage, Alicia Svigals, Lauren Brody, 1Vicky Parrott and Adrienne Cooper of Mikveh. PER „,, R„.. OR THE PERFORMING t e,eft o Worn Count onrirostroall ervairshand 'fern Tickets PLUS 800.585.3737 At all Tickets PLUS outlets, including Meijer Stores A COMMUNITY ENRICHMENT PROGRAM OF •ACOMB COMMUNITY COLLEGE • •`.‘•?: Come experience a revolution in dining and atmosphere that will change your image of Thai Cuisine forever! utstru •: , •!° 44 • '••,-rio'V•"'"' Mort — Thur. iiam -robin • Fri. r r am- f i PM Sat. f2 pm-ii pm • Sun. pm Lunch served 16 ;pm Mon - fri 3092,3 Woodward Ave. Royal. Oak, MI 48073 1: mile &I Woodward in The Nlorthwood Shopping Center 4/26 2002 75