When Do We Eat? Soundtrack - Digital
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"When Do We Eat?" is The "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" of Jewish Music.
Many of these songs were written by the legendary Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach.
Music featured in the film's original trailer below.
1. Shma Yisrael - Cantor Lazar Wax
2. Ki Va Moed - Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach
3. Mamzer! - Mark Adler
4. Avinu Malkeinu - RebbeSoul
5. Holy Thing To Do (Hashiveinu) - Mark Adler & The Three Cantors
6. Temple Of Song - C. Lanzbom
7. Elevate (AKA Lord Get Me High) - Etan G
8. Rafi Attacks - Mark Adler
9. Mizmor L'dovid - Mark Adler & The Three Cantors
10. Adir Hu - Inasense
11. We've Got Five Kids - Mark Adler
12. Mishpuchah - Chutzpah
13. Straw Hearts - C. Lanzbom
14. Don't Need A Drug Hug/Eliyahu Hanavi - Mark Adler & The Three Cantors
15. Harvest Dance - David Perkins
16. Ki Va Moed - C. Lanzbom & Noah Solomon
17. What Makes Dis Night - Reality Schock
18. Shehchiyanu - Mark Alder & When Do We Eat? Chorus
19. Eliyahu Hanavi - The Three Cantors
20. Ein Kelokainu - The Three Cantors
21. Yachad - The Three Cantors
22. Hatov - Neshama Carlebach
Many of these songs were written by the legendary Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach.
Music featured in the film's original trailer below.
1. Shma Yisrael - Cantor Lazar Wax
2. Ki Va Moed - Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach
3. Mamzer! - Mark Adler
4. Avinu Malkeinu - RebbeSoul
5. Holy Thing To Do (Hashiveinu) - Mark Adler & The Three Cantors
6. Temple Of Song - C. Lanzbom
7. Elevate (AKA Lord Get Me High) - Etan G
8. Rafi Attacks - Mark Adler
9. Mizmor L'dovid - Mark Adler & The Three Cantors
10. Adir Hu - Inasense
11. We've Got Five Kids - Mark Adler
12. Mishpuchah - Chutzpah
13. Straw Hearts - C. Lanzbom
14. Don't Need A Drug Hug/Eliyahu Hanavi - Mark Adler & The Three Cantors
15. Harvest Dance - David Perkins
16. Ki Va Moed - C. Lanzbom & Noah Solomon
17. What Makes Dis Night - Reality Schock
18. Shehchiyanu - Mark Alder & When Do We Eat? Chorus
19. Eliyahu Hanavi - The Three Cantors
20. Ein Kelokainu - The Three Cantors
21. Yachad - The Three Cantors
22. Hatov - Neshama Carlebach
From the liner notes by When Do We Eat? director Salvador Litvak:
"When Do We Eat?" isn't just about Jews - it's about Judaism. And if we're gonna talk about Judaism, we're gonna have to sing first. So play the audio track above - Eliyahu Hanavi - and sing that wordless song or "niggun" along with The Three Cantors. Go on, no one will laugh.
It's tribal, isn't it? As much as Judaism is about books, commandments and holidays, it's also about singing with the tribe because that's how we elevate. Most of the melodies on this record were brought down by Reb Shlomo Carlebach z''l, a.k.a. the Singing Rabbi, whose House of Love and Prayer stood around the corner from the Grateful Dead's place on Haight Street.
Both Reb Shlomo and Jerry Garcia are gone now, but if there's a house band in heaven, they're fronting it. They raise us up to our higher, better, truer selves, and that's what Etan G is saying on track 7 when he sings Reb Shlomo's "Lord, Get Me High."
Enjoy!
"When Do We Eat?" isn't just about Jews - it's about Judaism. And if we're gonna talk about Judaism, we're gonna have to sing first. So play the audio track above - Eliyahu Hanavi - and sing that wordless song or "niggun" along with The Three Cantors. Go on, no one will laugh.
It's tribal, isn't it? As much as Judaism is about books, commandments and holidays, it's also about singing with the tribe because that's how we elevate. Most of the melodies on this record were brought down by Reb Shlomo Carlebach z''l, a.k.a. the Singing Rabbi, whose House of Love and Prayer stood around the corner from the Grateful Dead's place on Haight Street.
Both Reb Shlomo and Jerry Garcia are gone now, but if there's a house band in heaven, they're fronting it. They raise us up to our higher, better, truer selves, and that's what Etan G is saying on track 7 when he sings Reb Shlomo's "Lord, Get Me High."
Enjoy!