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Mordechai Gebirtig: The Folk Song and the Cabaret Song

from IN PRE-WAR POLAND

Natan Gross
Affiliation:
film director, writer, poet, translator, and journalist who has lived in Israel since 1950.
Michael C. Steinlauf
Affiliation:
Gratz College Pennsylvania
Antony Polonsky
Affiliation:
Brandeis University, Massachusetts
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Summary

WHEN does a song become a ‘folk’ song? Certainly not when it is written down, and not when it has only been sung for the first time. Only when it has been repeated once, twice, or three times—when it catches on and moves from the stage to the kitchen and its composer is forgotten. But even then it must survive the test of time. Scholars say it takes at least two generations.

A song's career can start on any stage, even an amateur one, and it need not be sung by a professional singer. But beginning on the professional stage, in an operetta or literary cabaret, gives a song a better chance. When first heard in cabaret or in the movies, it may become a hit, popular throughout a country or even throughout the world. Yet a hit song is not a folk song. Its popularity passes; it gives way to new fashions. Old people may still recall it with nostalgia, but it says nothing to new generations. It is different with a folk song, which enters the repository of national folklore and remains there. It becomes a part of folk culture, while its author remains anonymous or is known only to specialists.

Mordechai Gebirtig (1877–1942) engraved his name on the history of Jewish cabaret in Poland between the wars. Every singer had his songs in his or her repertoire. These songs spread from the cabaret stages (kleynkunstbine) of Łódź and Warsaw to all of Poland and to the entire Jewish world. Even today they are alive on the stage and in Jewish homes; they are an indispensable part of the repertoire of Jewish singers. They are also arousing increasing interest among non-Jewish audiences in Poland, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, and the United States. Since the destruction of European Jewry these songs have become a crucial means of learning about Jewish folklore and the life of the Jewish poor, matters inadequately recorded in Yiddish literature and other sources.

Mordechai Gebirtig (né Bertig) was born on 4 May 1877 in Kazimierz, Kraków's Jewish quarter. After a few years of traditional instruction in a kheyder his father apprenticed him to a carpenter. Gebirtig spent his youth among workers, and this environment shaped his political views, as he came under the influence of social democratic parties.

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Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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