Sephardic Shabbat Service: Biography of Cantor Charles Davidson
Cantor Charles Davidson, D.S.M., is the Hazzan Emeritus of
Congregation Adath Jeshurun in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania. A member of the second
graduating class of the Cantors Institute of the Jewish Theological Seminary
in New York, he is a gifted and prolific composer who has written a wide variety
of synagogue and secular choral music during the past 50 years. Some of his best-known
works include I Never Saw Another Butterfly (1971), a moving musical
setting of the children’s poems from the Terezin concentration camp, and Chassidic
Sabbath (1961), a Friday night service set in Chassidic style. Also of note is ...And
David Danced Before the Lord (1966), the first Friday night service to use popular modern musical idioms (jazz-blues), and La
Tavla de Dulce (1992), an oratorio commemorating the 500th anniversary
of the Jewish expulsion from Spain. Cantor Davidson has composed a number
of oratorios, concert operas, and children’s choral works. A new recording of three of Cantor Davidson’s
Jewish choral works, ...And David Danced Before the Lord,
A Singing of Angels, and Baroque Suite was recently released by Naxos American Classics as part of
the Milken Archive of American Jewish Music series.
Sephardic Service for the Sabbath (1972-74 and 1990) contains a combination of
authentic Sephardic and Yemenite melodies, as well as original compositions by
Davidson. According to the composer, the work was not intended to be a scholarly
exposition of Jewish ethnomusicology, but rather a personal tribute to the land
and people of Israel. The musical inspirations for the service came from melodies
overheard by Davidson during his many visits to Israel, as well as from transcriptions
by Jewish musicologists.