A SHORT KLEZMER BIOGRAPHY
The book Dave Tarras: The King of Klezmer is 37 pages. Big pages: 8 ½” X 14″. Tarras played clarinet in the Catskills and brought his wife to the “mountains.” He owned a house in Brooklyn. He wore a suit a lot. He was very talented. Here are two representative sentences from the book: 1) “’I admired my grandfather and loved to spend some time in the mountains [with him],’ said Marc Tarras, grandson and doctor.” 2) “Dave was a very funny guy and had a great sense of humor.”
Naftule Brandwein — another great klezmer clarinetist — drank heavily, hung around mobsters, and supposedly almost electrocuted himself with a lightbulb-festooned suit. I think a bio of Brandwein would be longer than 37 pages.
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Check out the Schmotown Revue next Wednesday (7-9 p.m, June 3) at Gigi’s on Fairmount, Cleveland Heights. Outdoors if the weather is good; indoors if raining. Soul music and klezmer.
6 comments
Nice guys don’t write history, or something like that? I heard Ty Cobb has an interesting biography.
Was it self-published by family? Seems like you alone could write far more about Tarras and that would be his musical side along. Great to be reminded of Tarras. Thanks, Bert.
Oh Master of the Sentence Chop….
Your autobio — this blog — will undoubtedly be the longest of any Klezmer musician in history. Or am I missing something?
Here’s hoping the Schmotown gig goes (went) well – wonder how feasible a Klezmer “Man of Constant Sorrow”
would be
To Dave Rowe:
We’ve done a parody of that tune called “A Man of Constant Blessings.” No joke.
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