CONTRIBUTOR

Benjy Fox-Rosen

Benjy Fox-Rosen (Los Angeles, 1984) is a composer/performer and researcher based in Vienna, Austria. As a composer he has been commissioned to write works for choirs, artistic interventions, and audio-installations. His works have been performed at the Arnold Schönberg Center, the Musikverein and the Weiner Festwochen. As a performer, Fox-Rosen is active as a singer and bass player, specializing in Yiddish song and klezmer music; three of his recordings were lauded by the Forward as Jewish Music recordings of the year. Fox-Rosen served as choir director of the historic Wiener Stadttempel Synagogue from 2017-2024, where he developed expertise in music of the Ashkenazi synagogue. As a researcher Fox-Rosen conducted his Master’s thesis on the Stadttempel choir, using ethnographic research methods to address questions of musical change, meaning and continuity. Fox-Rosen has also published scholarly reflections on his own artistic practice, focusing on questions of translation in the performance of Yiddish song, particularly in the German speaking world. Fox-Rosen is currently a research fellow at the Music and Minorities Research Center at the University of Music and the Performing Arts, Vienna. His current project focuses on the history of minority music research in Vienna.

RELATED ARTICLES

Blog

Centering the Voice of the Witness

Benjy Fox-Rosen

A member of the 2023 In geveb/Fortunoff fellowship cohort reflects on the question “How can one ethically use recorded Holocaust testimony as the basis for musical composition?”

Blog

On Not Understanding: Performing Yiddish Song Today

Benjy Fox-Rosen

As a composer and performer of Yiddish music, Rosen confronts the fact that most members of my audience do not understand the language of the texts he performs. Yet, while music does not communicate information in the same way as language, it can lead listeners towards specific associations and meanings. There are multiple instances in which translation, imagined or guided, takes place during a musical performance and the composer and performer mediates these processes.

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