Brother Moses Smote the Water is a live album by the American klezmer group the Klezmatics, with Joshua Nelson and Kathryn Farmer.[2][3] It was released in 2005 by Piranha Records. The album mixes together traditional Yiddish songs and gospel.[4]
The Klezmatics and Nelson supported the album by touring together in 2005.[5]
Production
Recorded live in Potsdamer Platz, the songs on the album are about the Jewish exodus from Egypt, and the commonality of Jewish and African American historical experience.[6][7]
The Times thought that "it's not so much a world music fusion as a spiritual transformation, and the result is as soulful as it is uplifting."[11] The Philadelphia Daily News deemed the album "an intriguing collaboration" concerning "the struggle against repression common to the histories of Jewish and African-American people."[9]
The Plain Dealer determined that "while some musical fusion sounds forced, the Jewish kosher music updated by the Klezmatics blends naturally with the black gospel songs newly interpreted by vocalists/keyboardists Joshua Nelson and Kathryn Farmer."[10]The Virginian-Pilot called the album's performances "stirring, joyful, reverent and triumphant."[12]
AllMusic wrote that "the styles are crunched together nearly seamlessly, the languages used (alternately Hebrew, Yiddish, and English) being the only differential in some parts."[8]
^Engelberg, Karen (April 1, 2005). "African American Jewish singer Joshua Nelson joins The Klezmatics...". The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. Calendar.
^"BULLETIN BOARD". Amherst Bulletin. Briefs. April 15, 2005. p. 20.
^Honigmann, David (5 Mar 2005). "CDs & DVDs". Financial Times. FT WEEKEND MAGAZINE. p. 39.
^Regenstreif, Mike (4 Mar 2005). "Guthrie's Jewish legacy". The Gazette. p. D9.