<$BlogRSDURL$>

Friday, September 02, 2016

Rabbi seeks royalties over Olympic klezmer routine 

Jerusalem rabbi said he would seek royalties from Japan's delegation to the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro for its allegedly unauthorised use of a melody he composed.

Rabbi Baruch Hayat, who according to the Shirunt website of Israeli songs composed the melody to the popular song "Kol Ha'Olam Kulo Gesher Tzar Me'od" to words attributed to The founder of the Breslover Hasidic movement, Rabbi Nachman.


The melody, played by a klezmer band, for the song whose title means "the entire world is a very narrow bridge" featured in the performance of Sae Miyakawa, a 16-year-old Japanese gymnast in the Rio Olympics, that ended on August 22.

But in an interview published Thursday by Ynet, Hayat said that the gymnast never asked his permission to play the song, which he added he never would have granted because he considers her performance immodest and incompatible with the values promoted by the 18th-century rabbi who is believed to have been the author of the lyrics.

"It's a disgrace," the 70-year-old rabbi told Ynet, adding he will "fight for what he is owed" in terms of royalties. "This was not exactly the intention of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov, to have his words play at the Olympics," he said of the routine, which featured only the melody of the song. "And it's not very modest." As a head of a yeshiva, a religious seminary, he said, he finds the use of his melody "inappropriate. Clearly, this is a matter of sanctity that cannot be used for just anything. It is known in Hasidic circles that melody also has sanctity."


Comments: Post a Comment

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Google
Chaptzem! Blog

-