LIFESTYLE → STANDING OVATION Issue 905 · March 30, 2022

For Old Times’ Sake

As soon as the summer was over, the three of them recorded Simchatone Volume One

For Old Times’ Sake

It was like watching a slideshow of my own career over the last four-plus decades. The concert, produced by Shea Mendlowitz and arranged by Yisroel Lamm brought together both new talent and industry old-timers, and when the backstage reunion began, everyone was hugging, taking pictures, and reminiscing about the past — and so was I. In one corner, there was a kumzitz going on with Rabbi Baruch Chait, Yossi Green, and Abie Rotenberg. Accompanying them were Yussi Sonnenblick (Pirchei’s first star soloist back in the 1960s, famous for his iconic “Eilecha” solo and more), Yisrael Wulliger, Rivi Schwebel, and Dr. Meir Abbitan (of Amudai Shaish back in the early ‘80s).

“You know, singing together with Burry [Baruch Chait] and Abie was one of the greatest moments I can remember,” Yossi Green told me later. He said that his passion for Jewish music began first by listening to Cantor Dovid Werdyger, and then to Ohr Chodosh and Simchatone.

The first Ohr Chodosh album, for those who might be too young to remember, was released in 1971 by Yossi Toiv and Rav Shmuel Brazil when they were still bochurim — and those classic Shmuel Brazil compositions such as “Eileh Barechev,” “Bilvavi,” and “Shmelke’s Niggun” still endure. Simchatone, on the other hand, sort of dissolved into obscurity, although back in the day it was a sensation. One night at Camp Torah Vodaath in the early ‘70s, three counselors — Yaakov Solomon, Yonah Weinrib, and Bency Schachter — were playing guitar when Yonah said, “Guys, I want you to know, I have enough songs to make an entire record.” As soon as the summer was over, the three of them recorded Simchatone Volume One. Even if you don’t remember the songs on the album, you might recall the cover. It featured a movie theater marquis that said, “The Sensational Simchatone: Fifth Record Breaking Month.” Yaakov told me that they found the movie marquis on New Utrecht Avenue in Boro Park and paid the guy $50.00 to get up on a ladder and install the lettering so they could take a picture.

One big backstage treat was running into my good friend Dovid Nulman. Not too many people know that Dovid, aside from his talent as a popular long-time music instructor skilled at an assortment of instruments, was also a part of the Rabbis’ Sons, Ohr Chodosh, and the Pirchei albums. It was a real treat listening to him and Baruch Chait playing some of the Rabbis’ Sons classics. Later that evening, Rabbi Chait — composer of “Mi Ha’Ish,” “Rabos Machshavos,” “Kol Ha’olam Kulo,” and hundreds of other songs (in addition to his prolific writing and chinuch career) was inducted into the Hall of Fame, a well-deserved honor.

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