Daniel Hoffman (violinist)
Daniel Warren Hoffman [1][2] is an American-Israeli klezmer violinist, composer, and documentary film producer. He first heard klezmer music played on the piano by his father.
Hoffman is the founder of the klezmer-jazz fusion ensemble, the Klez-X [3][4] and co-founder of Davka [5] and Trio Carpion. He also performs with Di Tsaytmashin,[6][7] Harel Shachal and the Ottomans,[8] and with Ute Lemper in Songs for Eternity.[9] He is the producer of the documentary film, Otherwise It’s Just Firewood,[10][11] the pilot film for a television series that will explore the role of the Italianate violin in disparate cultures worldwide. Otherwise It's Just Firewood was aired widely on American PBS stations in 2018.
His Western classical teachers include Daniel Kobialka, Raphael Bronstein and Ariana Bronne, and is a graduate of The Manhattan School of Music. He has also studied and performed Arabic, Turkish, Greek, and Balkan music. He grew up in La Habra, California and relocated to Israel in 2005.
As a composer, he has received composition grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, Meet the Composer, and numerous American theaters, including Theater J, the San Diego Repertory Theatre, and Traveling Jewish Theater.
See also
References
- "The fiddler on a Tel Aviv roof".
- "In Israel, a balanced Mideast diet". 24 May 2007.
- "Klezmer Review: Klez-X / Harbst". www.klezmershack.com. 17 December 2004.
- "The San Francisco Klezmer Experience (aka The Klez-X) on Apple Music". Apple Music.
- "Zeek - Sex and the Golem". www.zeek.net.
- "All musical on the western Yiddish front".
- "Yiddish Baroque Music - Brilliant Classics: 95338BR - CD or download - Presto Classical". www.prestoclassical.co.uk.
- "Can musical harmony rise above the wreckage of Israel-Turkey ties?".
- Catlin, Roger (3 February 2017). "Work by Jewish Holocaust victims lives on in Ute Lemper's 'Songs for Eternity'" – via www.washingtonpost.com.
- "An Irish fiddler in five days? How 'musical extreme sports' connects". 19 March 2018 – via Christian Science Monitor.
- "Fiddling around in Ireland".