No, that's not Zeppelin.
Perhaps the above-mentioned quotation doesn't ring as quick a bell as the title of the song in which it appears: "Sunrise, Sunset." Seedlings and sunflowers don't right out there scream "Jewish." And yet, a simple utterance of the two words sunrise and sunset together in one sentence will get most American Jews (and even many non Jews) above a certain age swooning and swaying all at the same time. Yuck.
We must admit, Fiddler on the Roof was never a big draw for us. We had little desire to pay attention during a screening in a social studies class at Spanish River High School while visiting a teen tour boyfriend in Boca, instead dreaming up what crazy stuff his fellow Louis Vuitton wallet-carrying-buddies would do at their poker game and BBYO scavenger hunt later that night. We missed its 2nd and 3rd Broadway revivals, in 1981 and 1990 respectively. We have seen clips of the film, but never the whole thing. We figured that gazing down from the balcony on high holidays at the film's lead actor, Chaim Topol, who attended our family's synagogue in the '80s, was enough.
Honestly, the music never really grabbed us (yes, we know it received some Academy Awards. With music by John Williams. Yes, we know he's big. Still, no grab).
Until today.
Driving home from the pharmacy this afternoon, we were listening to our children's Jewish 'till You're Satisfied CD by the Funkey Monkeys. The CD has a lot of classics you may have heard at camp, Hebrew school, or youth groups, but these versions are updated, funked up, and totally raging.
So, check out this two-year-old soul version (complete with a horns section) of the classic song your grandparents cried to at the silver screen in 1971. And feel free to tell your Grandma Beverly about it in West Palm. It will get her rockin'. Maybe she'll even share it with her Mah Jongg group.
Here's the Zeppelin you were thought you might get. And it is from just 2 years after Fiddler, no less!
No comments:
Post a Comment