Sidor Belarsky
Sidor Belarsky, born Isidor Livshitz (February 12, 1898 – June 7, 1975), was a Ukrainian-American singer born to a Jewish family in Kryzhopol, Ukraine.[1] He came to the United States in 1930[2] or 1931.[3]
His recording of "Dem Milners Trern" ("The Miller's Tears"), a Yiddish folk song composed by M. M. Warshavsky, was featured in the Coen brothers's film, A Serious Man. The song's subject is the expulsion of Jews from hundreds of villages in Czarist Russia.[4]
Discography[]
- Forward 70th Anniversary: Sidor Belarsky Sings of the Hopes and Dreams of the East Side, Lazar Weiner, piano. Artistic Enterprises, Inc. (c. 1967) (presented by the Forward Association and The Workmen's Circle)
Notes[]
- ^ Belarsky History Archived 2011-05-29 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Sidor Belarsky". Recorded Sound Archives.
- ^ "Sidor Belarsky Dead at 76". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. June 9, 1975.
- ^ Anthology of Yiddish Songs, ed. Vinkovetszky, et al, Mount Scopus Publications, Magnes Press, vol two, 1984, p. 123
External links[]
Categories:
- 1898 births
- 1975 deaths
- Jewish singers
- Ukrainian male singers
- Yiddish-language singers
- 20th-century singers
- 20th-century male singers
- Ukrainian singer stubs