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Billboard Magazine - Review

NPR, World Cafe From WXPN: The Klezmatics & Nora Guthrie: On Woody

Village Voice - Consumer Guide: Pick Hits

The Gazette (Montreal) - Review

The Chicago Sun Times - Review

Los Angeles Times, Traditional and innovative? It must be the Klezmatics

Time Out New York, CD Review: The Klezmatics: Rise Up! Shteyt Oyf!

San Francisco Bay Guardian, Frequencies: Shma Yisrael

The Plain Dealer, World: The Klezmatics

New Jersey Jewish News, New Batch of Klezmer Releases Makes an Impressive Collection

Cafe International, Top 10 Jewish CDs of All-Time

The Chicago Sun Times: Wonder Wheel Review

By Thomas Conner

Woody Guthrie's life on Mermaid Avenue, in the immigrant neighborhood of Brooklyn's Coney Island, was the closest he got to being stationary. Settling there with his second wife, Marjorie Mazia, they set to raising kids. Woody turned his insatiable curiosity to the things immediately around him and within his own family. Marjorie's mother was legendary Yiddish poet Aliza Greenblatt, and the two found in each other kindred spirits of wordplay and idealism.

It was in this environment Woody's songwriting settled a bit, too. He began applying his ideas of union (as in of all humankind, not just workers) to daily life, with less urgency but no less potency. These are the songs covered here, amazingly but appropriately by the Klezmatics, the premier and popular klezmer group in America. And if you can accept that there is a premier and popular klezmer group, you're halfway to understanding how well this disc works. The 'Matics surround Woody's lyrics with music not just Jewish but simple folk (the daily mantra of "Gonna Get Through This World"), psychedelic ("Pass Away"), Eastern European ("Goin' Away to Sea") and whatever seemed to fit the songs. It's another project from the Archives that seems baffling on paper but skips merrily out of the speakers and becomes the life of the party.

06/23/2006