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Solomon Smulewitz
Birth Date
April 13, 1868
Birth Place
Pinsk, Russia
Death Date
January 1, 1943
Death Place
New York, NY, United States

Solomon Smulewitz  Biography

Songwriter, lyricist, bard, actor, badkhn (wedding jester and entertainer), balladeer, and early recording singer Solomon Smulewitz was born on April 13, 1868 in Pinsk, Russian Empire (now Belarus), and immigrated to the United States in 1889.

He was one of the most prolific and talented of the early Yiddish composers who fashioned a type of Yiddish counterpart to American popular song around the turn of the 19th–20th century and in the immediately ensuing years. He wrote a profusion of songs (words and music) and many lyrics for other songwriters.

His subject matter ranged from immigrant families, labor conditions, biblical vignettes, Judaic observances, Jewish historical incidents, nostalgia, immigration obstacles, and current topical subjects to wedding celebration songs. In the last decade of his life—when, to eke out a basic subsistence, he toured the United States and traveled across Canada from Halifax to Calgary and Winnipeg, entertaining local Jewish audiences with his own and similar songs—he mused on man’s course through life in his song Man shpilt teater (Mankind Plays in a Theater): “We act as if we were all on the stage, each one acting out his little life to a script written and directed by Almighty God.”

Throughout the first two decades of the 20th century Smulewitz recorded his songs in many of the earliest recording studios on a regular basis. Thereafter he continued to turn out melodies and lyrics for others to sing. His legacy comprises about 150 known or traceable songs and song lyrics—of which A brivele der mamen is now unquestionably his most famous—although in a letter to the press he once referred to twice that number with his own tunes, in addition to 200 sets of words to melodies by others.

He died on January 1, 1943 in New York.


7 Songs Composed by Solomon Smulewitz

 7 Tracks Composed   Add songs to playlist
  • A Brivele Der Mamen
    2:16
    Instrumental
  • A Brivele Der Mamen
    3:56
    Yiddish
  • A Brivele Der Mamen
    5:39
    Yiddish
  • A Brivele Der Mamen
    2:17
    Instrumental
  • A Brivele Der Mamen
    2:47
    Yiddish
  • A Brivele Der Mamen
    3:51
    Yiddish
  • Oyfn Pripitchik
    1:50
    Yiddish

3 thoughts on “Kaminos”

  1. Jim Borman says:

    Was Nicholas related to Alexander Saslavsky who married Celeste Izolee Todd?

  2. Mark Goldman says:

    Anyone have a contact email for Yair Klinger or link to score for Ha-Bayta?

  3. allan wolinsky says:

    wish to have homeland concert video played on the big screen throughout North America.

    can organize here in Santa Barbara California.

    contacts for this needed and any ideas or suggestions welcomed.

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