Crossover Dreams
Does folksinger Debbie Friedman have the cure for our spiritual blues?
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Crossover Dreams
Does folksinger Debbie Friedman have the cure for our spiritual blues?
Debra Nussbaum Cohen
From Moment, June 1996
Reprinted with Permission.
Packed into a hotel ballroom last November, more than 1,000 Jewish
convention-goers in business suits and high heels found themselves
standing together and swaying arm-in-arm to the resonant melody and
lyrics of Debbie Freidman's ``Mishebeyrach,'' a song based on the
prayer asking God for healing.
It was a jolting charge to the spiritual batteries of many of those
attending the General Assembly (G.A.) of the Council of Jewish
Federations. Usually the G.A. is about as inspiring as its name: a
mass meeting of Jewish technocrats, funders, and fundees trying to
figure out how to solve the Jewish continuity crisis and balance
budgets at the same time.
But this year's G.A. saw --- or rather heard --- something new. ``We need
to get in touch with our Judaism,'' said a teary Marci Erlebacher, vice
president for community relations at the Jewish Federation of
Syracuse, New York, shortly after Friedman's appearance. Singing
prayers together ``was like being cleansed inside,'' she added.
The setting may have been unusual, but for those familiar with Debbie
Freidman, the effect was not. It was repeated at the convention of
the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, held last December in
Atlanta, where Freidman was welcomed with roars of approval and
dancing in the aisles by the 4,000 Reform Jews attending her concert.
It happened again in January at Carnegie Hall, where, in a hint that
Friedman's music may be on the verge of crossing over into the pop
mainstream, some 2,000 New Yorkers put their arms around one another
and raised their voices together in sweet communion as Friedman led
them in song.
After 13 albums and 25 years as a professional musician, the
dark-haired folksinger who bears a striking resemblance to Joan Baez,
is finding herself enthusiastically embraced by diverse parts of the
Jewish community, from the Reform movement summer camps where she got
her start to fund-raising meetings of the United Jewish Appeal (UJA).
Friedman tours constantly, performing at synagogues, Jewish community
centers, conventions and retreats. Her music is taught in the
cantorial studies program at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of
Religion, the Reform seminary. Her songs ``Mishebeyrach'' and ``Lechi
Lach'' have become standards at many Reform synagogue and youth group
services, and at the spiritual healing services that are mushrooming
around the country.
She has an expanding children's audience, and her music has been
licensed to several kid-related projects, including a ``Barney in
Concert'' video, in which the peripatetic purple dinosaur sings her
up-tempo version of the ``Aleph-Bet'' song. She even has her own home
page on the World Wide Web, put up by Tara Publications, a
Baltimore-based music company (www.jewishmusic.com/dfr.htm).
Her gentle, folk-based melodies sound just right to Friedman's
baby-boomer peers, whose musical tastes, like her own, were shaped by
the ``singer-songwriter'' generation of the 1960s and early 1970s. Her
egalitarian sensibility and unselfconscious feminism have made her
beloved in the Reform movement, in ``Jewish renewal'' circles, and among
feminist groups. Meanwhile, Freidman's own spiritual search, a
journey of deepening religious conviction and healing, touches those
who are seeking out connection with authentic Judaism.
People are ``hungry for it, really hungry'' for a sense of spiritual
connectedness, says Freidman. ``Jews of every age are looking for a
place to live their Jewish lives and to put their Jewish hearts.''
``She seems to have hit a chord in those looking for a sense of
spirituality that they are not getting from conventional Jewish
sources,'' says Velvel Pasternak ,a publisher and promoter of Jewish
music. ``Some people are not turned on by the [traditional] sounds of
Eastern European prayer, and she seems to talk to them.''
``She appeals to all ages, the parents of the '60s and the kids of the
'90s,'' says Irwin Rubinschneider, a mental health administrator from
Brooklyn, who, with his wife and two young children, braved a blizzard
to attend Freidman's Carnegie Hall debut in January.
Freidman is crossing over denominational lines in a way that no one
but the late Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach was able to do, says Pasternak,
who is Orthodox. After haring Friedman perform at the conference for
the Advancement of Jewish Education last summer in Amherst,
Massachusetts, and Orthodox woman said, ``I've been [praying]
all my life, but today was the first time I felt like I was really
davening.''
``She comes from a Jewish place rather than being a New Age performer
who later decides to do some Jewish songs,' said Rubinschneider.
Friedman's personal ``Jewish space'' is an airy pre-war apartment on
Manhattan's Upper West side that she's sub-letting from someone
spending the year in Israel. The grand piano is tucked into a corner
of the living room. Decorative dreidels and boxes adorned with Jewish
stars and musical symbols cover the coffee table and bookshelves.
Strewn on he floor are the dog toys that Friedman fruitlessly tries to
keep in a straw basket. Farfel, a large animal who can be politely
described as being of mixed lineage, bounds around the apartment with
slobbering enthusiasm. Each morning they join the ``doggie minyan'' in
nearby Riverside Park for exercise and shmoozing.
The apartment's second bedroom has been converted into a recording
studio complete with computers and an intricate looking soundboard.
It's in this room that she wrote her most recent album, Renewal
of Spirit, which is devoted to contemplative melodies relating to
healing and spirituality. In some circles Friedman has come to be
known at he ``high priestess of Jewish healing.''
It's a title brought upon her by fate, not calculation. For most of
the past decade, the 45-year-old Friedman has battled a debilitating
and, until recently, mysterious illness. After taking too much of an
incorrect combination of drugs prescribed for an illness in 1988, she
developed dysautonomia, a neurological disorder, and an adrenal gland
problem. She's been on a roller-coaster of medical crises ever since,
bedridden for weeks at a time and occasionally confined to a
wheelchair. A recent bout with adrenal failure landed her in a
Manhattan hospital for more than a week. A new doctor may have
identified the source of the problem and has started a different
treatment that as Friedman feeling fine. Confronting her own physical
debility and limitations has brought her an exquisite appreciation for
everyday blessings. ``In many ways it's given me a gift, `` says
Freidman. ``Healing is about what he illness teaches us. I've never
had more clarity or understanding.''
Around the corner from her apartment is Congregation Anshe Chesed,
where on the first Wednesday evening of each month Friedman and Rabbi
Michael Strassfeld lead a Jewish healing service cosponsored by the
National Center for Jewish Healing and Manhattan's main gay and
lesbian synagogue, Congregation Beth Simchat Torah.
The service was created to provide spiritual sustenance to seriously
ill Jews and their families and friends. Many of the 40 to 50 people
who sit in an arc around Friedman and Strassfeld are fighting AIDS and
cancer. Others are there simply to sing, to meditate, and to connect
to Friedman's music in their chronic battle against the feelings of
alienation and disconnection that seem to be part of the contemporary
urban condition. They leave the service feeling centered and calmed,
more whole than when they came in.
I've really been forced to feel illness, and life, and death,''
Freidman says. ``I've learned that I can be damaged or impaired and
still have those spiritual experiences.''
Friedman, the third of four children, spent the first five years of
her life in Utica, New York, where her father worked as a butcher and
her mother as a homemaker. The family moved to St. Paul, Minnesota,
where she grew up with the sense that Jewish life could be more
vibrant than it was. She yearned to go back to New York.
As a 16-year-old working as a baby-sitter at Camp Herzel in Webster,
Wisconsin, she picked up a guitar and began picking out the song a
group of campers were singing. ``It took a couple of notes, but I
played it by ear,'' She recalls. ``I started playing Peter, Paul and
Mary songs, and Judy Collins.''
Several months later she went to a Reform youth group retreat and
brought along the guitar she'd purchased in the meantime. ``They
didn't have a song leader, so I was elected by default, `` she says.
When she was 18, Friedman went to Israel to learn Hebrew at an ulpan
on Kibbutz Yifat, in the Jordan Valley. She soon realized she wasn't
going to lean much Hebrew hanging out with Americans, so after the
first day she asked to work with someone who spoke no English.
She was set to the kitchen to work with a woman ``who was just a loon.
I was totally motivated to learn Hebrew faster so I could know what
she was saying about me,'' recalls Friedman.
On her second day at the kibbutz, the loony cook and her colleagues
wheeled in a crate of onions for Friedman to peel and clean. Her eyes
stinging and tearing, Friedman said, `` Lo, lo, lo [no, no,
no], I can't do this.'' So the kitchen ladies took away the onions
and replaced them with a cart of dead chickens for Friedman to
de-feather. ``I laid them side by side on the table with their arms
around each other, their legs crossed like they were Rockettes,'' says
Friedman, laughing. The kitchen ladies ``started cackling like
chickens and laughing hysterically, and then they invited me to their
homes. That's when I really started to learn Hebrew.''
When she came back she began working at Reform synagogues and camps,
leading songs and teaching music and prayer, and soon began composing
original music.
Her first song came to her on a bus. ``A melody came into my head, so
I put it to my favorite prayer, the V'Ahavta,'' which says
``And you shall love God with all your heart.'' She taught it to the
children at a Reform retreat, who responded by standing up, putting
their arms around one another, an singing along. ``I realized that
something important was happening,'' she says.
Her lyrics, set to exquisite harmonies, often combine English and
Hebrew. Children and those with little Jewish literacy as well as
knowledgeable listeners are easily drawn into lyrics like these, based
on Genesis 12, where God tells Abraham to leave his home and go to a
place that God will show him ( Lech lacha is the command ``to
go):
Lechi lach, to a place that I will show you.
Lech lecha, to a place you do not know.
Lechi lach, on your journey I will bless you
And you shall be a blessing, lechi lach.
At most of her concerts people start humming along about six bars into
a song even if they've never heard it before.
Word of her talent soon made its way through the Reform movement. For
the next two decades she wrote music for Hanukkah, Purim, and Jewish
rites of passage. She worked as a cantor at synagogues in Houston,
Chicago, New Jersey, Palm Springs, San Diego, and Los Angeles and
directed music programs at the University of Judaism, the University
of California at Santa Cruz, Brandeis University, and the
Brandeis-Bardin Institute in Brandeis, California.
Her recent appearances before the Council of Jewish Federations in
Boston and at the UJA National Young Leadership Conference in
Washington, D.C., marked watershed moments --- but perhaps more for
the Jewish organizational world than for Freidman. One of the four
``tracks'' at the G.A. this year, and the only one to be
over-subscribed, with more than 1,000 Jewish professionals clamoring
to get in, focused heavily on spirituality. And about one-third of
the workshops and sessions a the UJA Young Leadership conference,
which brought together some 3,000 men and women, were concerned with
spirituality in some way, said conference co-chair Lynn Sachse
Schrayer. ``No one does it like Debbie. Her music and her message,
which is a mixture of spirituality, intelligence, sensitivity, and
neshama [soul], are thought-provoking but not threatening.
Debbie was way ahead of all of us with this.''
The Jewish establishment's embrace of Freidman coincided with her move
to the geographic heart of the Jewish universe: Manhattan. For
Passover in 1995, Ma'ayan, a Manhattan-based Jewish women's group, had
invited Freidman to help lead the hugely popular feminist seders that
they have run for the past three years. She felt as if she had come
home. In August she moved from California to the closest thing that
modern America has to a shtetl, the Upper West Side.
``When I was in Los Angeles I wanted my friends to buy into a whole
area of town and create a shtetl. I moved to New York because I
wanted a more full life, a Jewish life. For me the Jewish life means
that I love and breathe my work, and my work is my life. I want to be
totally immersed, `` she says.
Friedman's producer, Randee Friedman (no relation), would like to see
Friedman cross over into the secular market much the way Christian
singer Amy Grant has. Grant is still beloved by the Christian music
audience, but their mainstream pop albums have sold millions of
copies.
Friedman's music sells like hot latkes in the Jewish market, but the
sales are tiny relative to the Christian and 'world beat'' categories,
which boast their own sections in major music stores. A few Jewish
groups seem on the verge of breaking through, like the Kelzmatics, the
funky klezmer collective that recently performed on a PBS special with
violinist Itzhak Perlman (see Moment, August 1995). Klezmatics
violinist Alicia Avigals recently toured with Robert Plant and Jimmy
Page of Led Zeppelin, and the latest Klezmatics album, Jews With
Horns, sold 10,000 copies in its first three months in release.
``Most Jewish performers are happy to sell out their first run of 500
tapes,'' says Randee Freidman.
Debbie Friedman's best-selling albums, And You Shall Be a
Blessing (1989) and Live at the Del (1990), have each sold
about 10,000 copies. Her latest, Renewal of Spirit, came out
in December of last year and has sold between 5,000 and 6,000 copies,
says her producer.
But figuring out where Friedman's intensely Jewish music would fit in
the he mainstream marketplace is not easy. ``Is Friedman folk? New
age? Liturgical? Spiritual?'' asks Randee Friedman. ``We're
struggling with that right now and want to come up with an album
concept that can cross over.''
But if it's not clear how to pitch Friedman to a mainstream market,
it's not clear, either, that mainstream success is what Friedman
really wants. She's not fond of shlepping through airports between
gigs, nor of the marketing and merchandising --- and compromising --- it
might take to succeed in the pop world.
There's only one time when Friedman says she really feels her soul
being nourished: when she's standing on stage watching hundreds or
thousands of people open up before her eyes and find something they
weren't even sure they were looking for.
``I live for those moments when people sing out and connect and create
this sense of community and camaraderie,'' she says. ``That's where
it's at. That's the best part.''
For booking information, contact Golden Land Connections at 212/683-7816.
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