Customise Consent Preferences

We use cookies to help you navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. You will find detailed information about all cookies under each consent category below.

The cookies that are categorised as "Necessary" are stored on your browser as they are essential for enabling the basic functionalities of the site. ... 

Always Active

Necessary cookies are required to enable the basic features of this site, such as providing secure log-in or adjusting your consent preferences. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable data.

Functional cookies help perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collecting feedback, and other third-party features.

Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics such as the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.

Performance cookies are used to understand and analyse the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.

Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with customised advertisements based on the pages you visited previously and to analyse the effectiveness of the ad campaigns.

Memglobal logo

Josh Harlow

Teiku – Reframing Ancestral Jewish Melodies

Pronouns: Any Pronouns

Chicago, IL

Describe Your Initiative My family sings unique melodies at the Passover seder, artifacts of our ancestral village in modern day Ukraine; strikingly, so does the family of Jonathan Barahal Taylor (this project’s co-leader and percussionist.) Teiku started as a musical ensemble exploring these melodies through the lens of Creative Music (“jazz”) with a rotating cast of collaborators, and with PoweredBy we are expanding, providing more mechanisms for others to engage with Jewish culture through their ears to foster community. To this end, we are creating an online archive containing recordings of unique Jewish family melodies and the stories behind them, and performing arrangements of these melodies over the course of several concerts and participatory sound experiences in Chicago and Detroit. What Are You Hoping to Learn from the Initiative? The process of working with and presenting our family histories through song has brought a new level of depth to our practice as creative improvisers and empowered us as cultural stewards. For our peers looking to find meaning and community in Jewish culture, the expansion of the project to include an accessible archive, more melodies and arrangements, and several performances means centered around that archive means that we can help them connect with greater depth to their own personal/communal diasporic Jewish histories and ancestral legacies. I look forward to the process of interviewing families about their stories and to the powerful exchange of energies we can achieve through live musical performance.