Abraham Binder
Abraham Wolf Binder (January 11, 1895 – October 10, 1966 in New York City) was an American composer.
Binder was born in New York City. He studied at Columbia University. He became a teacher in 1921 and professor at the New York Jewish Institute of Religion in 1937. He was the founding music director of the Stephen Wise Free Synagogue from 1926 under Rabbi Stephen S. Wise until his death in 1966 and was a respected leader within the Union for American Hebrew Congregations, having edited and published many compositions and articles on synagogue music. He composed an opera, several orchestral suites and works of choir music. He also collected and arranged Jewish folk songs.
Selected works
- A tfile
- Adon olam
- Adoration
- Etz hayyim hi
- Kindling the Sabbath Lights
- O Bless the Lord, My Soul
- Seder avoda
- Two Hassidic Moods, for string quartet
gollark: Of all the stuff to run out of... I'm cancelling one experiment due to lack of Magis.
gollark: My experiments are today in about five hours; I'll post the codes/times when I get home.
gollark: I mean, autorefresher extensions are allowed, right?
gollark: Binary search or whatever.
gollark: With one refresh an hour I think you can narrow the time of death down to within a few seconds with... I don't know, quite a few... refreshes.
References
- Heskes, Irene, ed. (1971). Studies in Jewish Music: Collected Writings of A.W. Binder. New York: Bloch Publishing Co. ISBN 0-8197-0272-2.
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