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Brivele

Khaveyrim Zayt Greyt (Friends, Get Ready)

Date:
Thursday, May 1
Time:
7:30 pm PDT
Cost:
$25 - $50
Learn more about Sliding Scale tickets.

Venue

The Wyncote NW Forum
1119 8th Ave (Entrance off Seneca St.)
Seattle, 98101 United States
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Event Format

In-Person
Maia Brown (on the left) poses holding a banjo, while Stefanie Brendler (on the right) poses holding an accordion. Both musicians stand in front of the Gum Wall.
Arts & Culture

Town Hall’s Spring 2024 Artist-in-Residence, Maia Brown, returns to the stage with her band, Brivele, to celebrate the release of their third album, Khaveyrim Zayt Greyt.

Brivele is a Seattle-based duo who braid together Yiddish song, anti-fascist and labor balladry, folk-punk, and contemporary rabble-rousing in stirring vocal harmony. In Yiddish, Brivele (בריוועלע) means “little letter.” Like letters, songs travel — through time and over borders. They pick up dirt, aromas, fingerprints. They are sent to lovers, they foment revolution, they get stolen and censored, burned and salvaged, sewn into our clothes.

Read More

Brivele is Maia Brown and Stefanie Brendler, who journey into the archives of Yiddish anti-fascist musical tradition, bringing together anti-authoritarian satire, mournful remembrances, and the disguised political commentary in folk ditties and theater classics. These songs are a correspondence: ancestors’ voices speaking clearly and uncompromisingly, sometimes sweetly, to the present moment.

Khaveyrim Zayt Greyt, Yiddish for “Friends, Get Ready,” traverses 19th & 20th century texts with present day resonance: songs newly translated or entirely reimagined in Yiddish and English; the poetry of censored Proletpen writers newly set to music; new klezmer interpretations of old melodies, and one modern cover of a British anti-fascist ballad by The Young’uns.

This album encompasses the band’s transition from a trio to a duo, including songs recorded both with and without Hannah Hamavid (vocals, violin, ukulele). These shifting harmonies join a broader chorus within the album, where you also hear:

voices of the unemployed and imprisoned

voices of people facing and fighting evictions

voices of McCarthy-era blacklisted poets

voices of writers murdered by the state

voices of workers; of immigrants

voices of disillusionment and steadfastness

voices in love

voices of resistance.


Presented by Town Hall Seattle.

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