Dave Brubeck: The Gates of Justice
Song of the Week
•
3m 10s
Park Avenue Synagogue has a history of building bridges between the Jewish and African American communities, such as through the Music Center’s gospel album, Be the Light (2021), and a recent performance of Dave Brubeck’s The Gates of Justice, written in 1969. Especially at Passover, we recognize the themes of enslavement and liberation that run through the African American and Jewish experiences and cultures, with a long history of shared understanding of their meaning and implications.
This performance at UCLA united Cantor Schwartz, Brubeck’s sons as the accompanying jazz trio (marking the first time they performed their father’s piece together), baritone Phillip Bullock, and musicians from Jewish and Black LA-based music groups. We hope that this collaboration shows what can be achieved when we pursue justice together.
Featuring Cantor Azi Schwartz, Baritone Phillip Bullock, Darius Brubeck, Chris Brubeck, and Dan Brubeck, members of Los Angeles area African-American and synagogue choirs, The UCLA Chamber Singers, and students of the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music, all under the direction of Neal Stulberg.
Lyrics: Hebrew liturgy, spirituals, and The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Music: Dave Brubeck (1920–2012)
Conductor: Neal Stulberg
Producer: Professor Mark Kligman
Video Editor: Tami Shaham
Up Next in Song of the Week
-
V’hi Sheamdah – Hope in Every Generation
In 2022, Cantor Jacqueline Rafii was commissioned by Cantor Schwartz to compose a new melody for “V'hi Sheamdah.” It took the form of a lullaby for her infant daughter, a promise of strength, hope, and resilience. Since October 7, it has become an anthem dedicated to all the hostages, a reminder ...
-
The Voice of My Beloved – Kol Dodi fr...
This setting for springtime by David Nowakowsky (1848–1921), part of the Song of Songs, is all about arrivals, expectation, and allegories of love. This passage is read during Passover, which we will celebrate during the upcoming month of Nisan. Nowakowsky flourished with other Jewish musical gre...
-
Somewhere (There’s a Place for Us), f...
West Side Story brought two geniuses to bear on a tale as old as humanity: lovers from warring tribes. Stephen Sondheim, z”l, whose 95th birthday would be this week, penned some immortal lines about people whose place is not here, whose time is not now, but who long for the place and time that is...