Nefesh Mountain (duo)

Tuesday, Mar 8, 2022

Tuesday, March 8 at 8 pm ET
Free on Zoom with Suggested $10 Donation
To Register – click here

“To us, sparrows represent a small but mighty voice. That’s why we chose to name the album for them—they’re often overlooked, but they’re beautiful and everywhere.” – Doni Zasloff, Nefesh Mountain

Join us for an evening of music performed by the wildly talented group, Nefesh Mountain. Fresh off of their debut performance at The Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, Tennessee, bandleaders Doni Zasloff and Eric Lindberg will perform as a duo from their studio in northern New Jersey. Zasloff and Lindberg will fill the evening with beautiful music rooted at the crossroads of Jewish spirituality and the roots of American roots. The duo will also talk about what it’s like being Jewish on the American Roots music scene today, share stories from life on the road and take questions from those in attendance.

About Nefesh Mountain

Since their arrival on the scene in 2015, Nefesh Mountain has been hailed as one of today’s formative boundary pushing Bluegrass/Americana bands. They’re among the first to truly give voice and openly represent Jewish American culture, tradition, values and spirituality in the world of American roots music. In a testament to the unbridled imagination and extraordinary grace of their musicianship, each track on Songs for the Sparrows ineffably evokes the sensation of roaming through the unknown. True to the album’s spirit of loving inclusivity, Lindberg and Zasloff, have created an elegantly wayward sound by melding elements of everything from Americana and Appalachian bluegrass to Celtic folk and Eastern European music. Not only a reflection of their vast musical knowledge, that open-hearted embracing of so many eclectic genres also speaks to the joyful curiosity that animates every aspect of their artistry.

Writing thirteen of the fourteen tracks, the duo looked back on a life-changing trip to Eastern Europe in 2018. “We tracked down the towns where our families are from, and it was devastating to see the destruction of the Holocaust firsthand, and to know that we’re not so far removed from that time,” says Lindberg. “” ‘Songs For The Sparrows’ ultimately came from that experience, and from thinking about the many groups of people who are horribly discriminated against in the U.S.” Zasloff adds: “To us, sparrows represent a small but mighty voice. That’s why we chose to name the album for them—they’re often overlooked, but they’re beautiful and everywhere.”

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The “Jews and Country Music” series is presented by the Weitzman National Museum of American Jewish History in partnership with the Ashkenaz Festival.

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February 15- Suiting the Sound: The Jewish Rodeo Tailors of Country Music

February 22- Mark Rubin: Jew of Oklahoma

March 1- Torah of Country Music with Joe Buchanan and Rabbi Sandra Lawson