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Shpil: The Art of Playing Klezmer is both a history of this popular
form of traditional Jewish music and an instructional book for
professional and amateur musicians. Since the revival of klezmer
music in the United States in the mid-1970s, Yiddish songs and
klezmer dance melodies have served as the soundtrack for a
resurgence of interest in Ashkenazic Jewish culture across the
globe. Klezmer has taken root not only in America s major urban
centers New York City, Chicago, San Francisco but also in emerging
Jewish music hotspots like St. Petersburg, Buenos Aires, Krakow,
and Tokyo. Its high energy, emotionally driven sound, and evocative
Yiddish lyrics have found audiences everywhere. Shpil offers an
expansive history of klezmer, from its medieval origins to the
present era, and its contributors encompass a cast of
world-renowned musicians who have recorded, performed, and studied
klezmer for years. Individual chapters concentrate on the most
common instruments found in a klezmer ensemble violin, clarinet,
accordion, bass, percussion, and voice and conclude with a
selection of three songs that illustrate and exemplify the history
and techniques of that instrument. Shpil includes a glossary and a
discography of both classic and new klezmer and Yiddish recordings,
all designed to guide readers in an appreciation of this remarkable
musical genre and the art of playing and singing klezmer tunes.
Shpil: The Art of Playing Klezmer is ideal for amateur enthusiasts,
musical scholars, beginning artists, and professional musicians,
both solo and ensemble indeed, anyone who wants to experience the
joy of listening to and playing this thousand-year-old folk music.
Master's Thesis from the year 2012 in the subject Economics -
Other, grade: -, The Graduate Institute, language: English,
abstract: There is wide-spread awareness about the fact that
business has caused or aggravated many significant global crises,
calling into question the sustainability of our current economy.
Proponents of the emerging concept of Integrated Reporting,
however, argue that corporations can reverse this trend by
reporting their financial information together with information
measured in CSR reports about at what costs to environment and
society, also called footprint, a corporation has achieved its
profits. Such opening up to disclosure, so the argument, creates
incentives for corporations to reduce their footprint; and
reputation and capital allocation will then reward well-performing,
sustainable corporations leading to a dynamic mechanism that will
contribute to sustainable development. Such an argumentation is
simplistic and does not hold. Property economics establishes that
within a property-based economy, corporations are faced with
specific economic requirements as a result of the capitalization
process, namely requirements to grow and secure profitability
across time and competition. Such requirements leave corporations
with no option than to subdue social and environmental
considerations to their pursuit of profitability. The latter, in
return, dictates that corporations use strategies like Integrated
Reporting, arguing for voluntary corporate self-regulation in
regards to costs imposed on society and environment, in order to
shape a regulatory framework that accommodates their ability to
respond to economic requirements. Corporations are moreover not
likely to voluntarily report on any measure that will threaten
their profitability. The concept of Integrated Reporting can not
simultaneously be a corporate tool for shaping a specific legal
framework that subdues environmental and social considerations; as
well as a contribution to sustai
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