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Shulmusic.org (Shul means
Synagogue in Yiddish) is mostly a repository of sheet music relating to
Jewish Liturgical Music. The music on this site has been selected
because it is out of copyright. If you believe we have infringed your
copyright please e-mail us at
info@shulmusic.org
As well as sheet music, you will find other resources on this site and
we hope these will be useful.
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Last updated: 15th January, 2007
Blue book - (45Mb) - Voice of Song
and Prayer, first published in London in 1899. Since then, this book has
been the foundation of choral music in the UK and the Commonwealth -
SATB
The Blue Book midis
[with Capella or Finale files]
Song
Nos.: 1 - 109 - available in .zip format
Song
Nos.: 110 - 274 - available in .zip format
Song Nos.:
275 - 317 - available in .zip format
Song
Nos.: 318 - 368 - available in .zip format
A word of thanks
All the midi and Capella/Finale files based on the 'Blue Book' on this
page are the fruit of the efforts of Malcolm Parker-Lisberg
and Mike Rosen, who took on this project voluntarily
and with amazing success! I sincerely thank them, both personally and on
behalf of all the lovers of shul music around the world who will now be
able, at the press of a button, to hear the contents of this more than
100-year old book, some of which is the basis for the music in regular
use in many shuls today.
Yeshar Koach!
Stephen Simpson
Malcolm Parker-Lisberg - a Profile
I was born in
Prestwich, Manchester in 1948 and went to school locally. There is a
large Jewish community in Prestwich. This must have had more influence
on me than I had realised, though it did not show itself until much
later. I returned to Manchester 20 years after getting married,
graduating from Manchester Polytechnic with an Electronic Engineering
degree and moving to Basingstoke, Hampshire.
I had chosen
engineering after having tried to learn to play the piano as a boy and
realising I did not have the ear or the talent. My return to Manchester
was the result of being 'head hunted' by a large multi-national company.
On our return to Manchester we had two sons, Mark and Nathan 7years and
14 years.
Jane's father
was Jewish and had married out. Her grandfather, who was Ashkenazi, had
been ostracised by the Manchester community for marrying his Sephardi
wife. Jane told me stories of her happy early childhood spent in the
synagogue with her father. Prior to Nathan's thirteenth birthday, Jane
had been experiencing what I thought was anti-semitic discrimination at
work, but that is another story. I told here that I wanted to convert to
Judaism. The next two days after speaking those words were the most
ecstatic and awe inspiring days I have ever experienced. Jane described
how her father's barmitzvah siddur had fallen on her head the day before
for no apparent reason. To cut a very long story short I went through
conversion at Jacksons Row Reform Synagogue, Manchester and became
interested in Jewish history, music and poetry.
I came across
the shulmusic.org website with the Bluebook and started to convert the
images of the scores to Capella scores and midi files so that I could
listen to the music. Though no musician, I could employ my engineering
expertise to find a combination of techniques to accomplish the task. I
then noticed a line on the website requesting help to convert all the
scores, as the webmaster was having difficulty finding a suitable
method, so I made the offer to help. Having started producing the scores
and midi files, the music somehow takes hold and won't let go. The more
you hear the more you want to hear. I hope when you listen to them they
give you as much pleasure as they have given me.
Malcolm Parker-Lisberg.
Mike
Rosen - a Profile
Born in 1949 in Baltimore, Maryland, I
became Bar Mitzvah at the Beth Tfiloh Synagogue. The rabbi was Samuel
Rosenblatt, the son of Yoselle Rosenblatt. This has absolutely nothing
to do with my interest in shul music; simply a brush with greatness.
I sang in school choirs in high school, and
did the obligatory 1960s folk music scene. My involvement with music was
rekindled in the mid-1980s, when my high school choir decided to have a
reunion. It was such fun for all of us that we continued to meet for
over a decade. Four of us from this group formed a barbershop quartet,
The Alumnotes. I also started singing with a local college/community
choir, again under the direction of Dr. Richard Disharoon, my high
school choir director, to whom I owe an unrepayable debt. Thanks, Dick!
In about 1990, I found myself self-employed,
which gave me the freedom to start attending services at Chizuk Amuno
Congregation more regularly. Their magic of their choir, under the
exacting direction of Saul Lilienstein, drew me in. In addition to
having a lot of music to learn, many of the scores were multi-generation
copies of handwritten originals; that is, mostly illegible.
Consequently, I started working with notation programs. Since leaving
Baltimore for Phoenix, Arizona in 1998, and then moving to Seattle,
Washington in 2005, I have honed my vocal and notation skills singing
with the Beth El, Temple Chai, and Temple Beth Am congregations, Cactus
Chordsmen, and Seattle Seachordsmen. I found shulmusic.org by accident,
and offered to help on this wonderful project. I hope you enjoy
listening to these great pieces as much as I do!
I am a cabinetmaker in the real world.
Please visit my site at
www.specialmillwork.com to learn even more about me.
Mike Rosen
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