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Music

Religious music:
HistoricalContemporary
PiyyutZemirotNigun
PizmonimBaqashot
Secular music:
IsraeliKlezmerSephardicMizrahi
Not Jewish in Form:
ClassicalMainstream and Jazz
Dance:
Israeli Folk DancingBallet
HorahHava NagilaYemenite dance
Israel
HatikvahJerusalem of Gold
Piyyutim
Adon OlamGeshemLekhah Dodi
Ma'oz TzurYedid NefeshYigdal
Music for Holidays
HanukkahPassoverShabbat
Music of the Haggadah
Ma NishtanaDayenuAdir Hu
Chad GadyaEchad Mi Yodea
Music of Hanukkah
BlessingsOh ChanukahDreidel Song
Al HanisimMi Y'malelNer Li

Zemirot (Hebrew: זמירות‎) (singular: zemer) are Jewish hymns, usually sung in the Hebrew or Aramaic languages, but sometimes also in Yiddish or Ladino. The best known zemirot are those sung around the table during Shabbat and Jewish holidays. Some of the Sabbath zemirot are specific to certain times of the day, such those sung for the Friday evening meal, the Saturday noon meal, and the third Sabbath meal just before sundown on Saturday afternoon. In some editions of the Jewish prayerbook (siddur), the words to these hymns are printed after the opening prayer (kiddush) for each meal. Other zemirot are more generic and can be sung at any meal or other sacred occasion.

The words to many zemirot are taken from poems written by various rabbis and sages during the Middle Ages. Others are anonymous folk songs that have been passed down from generation to generation. The words generally focus on the themes of the Sabbath or the specific holiday being celebrated.

The melodies vary greatly from one Jewish community to another, as local tunes and styles of music are adapted to the same liturgical poems. One famous hymn, Adon Olam, (Ruler of the Universe) has been set to literally hundreds of different tunes. Jews of different backgrounds enjoy sharing the various versions when they meet around the Sabbath table. New tunes continue to be written today for the same ancient lyrics. It is now rare, however, for new zemer-type lyrics to be written.

The term zemirot is used by Spanish and Portuguese Jews to refer to the sequence of psalms in the morning service, known to other communities as pesuke de-zimrah.

See also

External links

Shabbatשבת
Prayers/Rituals
Baqashot • Haftarah • Kiddush • Jewish services • Lekhah Dodi • Maftir • Seudah Shlishit • Shalom Aleichem • Torah reading • Triennial cycle • Yedid Nefesh • Zemirot

Food
Challah • Cholent • Gefilte fish • Kugel • Pescado frito

Objects
Blech • Challah cover • Shabbat candles

Laws
Biblical Sabbath • Cooking on Shabbat • Driving • Electricity • Eruv • Eruv tavshilin • Eruv techumin • Muktzah • Prohibited activities • Rabbinically prohibited activities • Shabbat goy • Shomer Shabbat

Innovations
Shabbat clock • Shabbat elevator • Shabbat lamp • Shabbat microphone • Shabbat mode • Shabbat module

Special Shabbat
Farbrengen • Shabbat Across America • Shabbaton • Eve of Passover on Shabbat

Motzei Shabbat
Havdalah • Kiddush Levana • Melaveh Malkah

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