I walked up to the door of the dancehouse the moment Golem played the last note of their first set. So I interviewed my friends about the opening reception:

“You missed the raspberries,” Sacred Atelier* told me.

“They were the biggest raspberries I’ve ever seen!” his wife, Gentle Airplane*, put in.

Police Octopus* began teaching me how to write Haitian Creole. Mwen is the word for “I.” Wi means “yes” [and is another spelling of the French oui].

I took out a piece of scrap paper to take notes, and on that paper was the word “oophorectomy.” (But I’d forgotten what it means.)

Then Golem began playing again, and I raced inside. They were lustily brilliant!

The key to pop music is the drummer. So I paid special attention to the Golem drummer, who played very simply, speedily, and kept the band on the edge of exhaustion, always.

Golem had none of the sanctimonious, look-at-me-I’m-Jewish! tone of most klezmer revivalists. (Incidentally, I am a Jew myself, if you’re preparing your anti-Semitic accusation letter.)

After the show (but before the encore), I interviewed the violinist, Alicia Jo Rabins:

“How long have you been together?” I inquired.

“Five years!” she answered.

Of course! Spontaneity like theirs does not appear overnight!

jill sigman/thinkdance at the Mount Tremper Arts Opening Party

jill sigman/thinkdance at the Mount Tremper Arts Opening Party
(See her blog entry on this performance.)

jill sigman/thinkdance installation at the Mount Tremper Arts Festival opening.

jill sigman/thinkdance installation at the Mount Tremper Arts Festival opening.

Golem brings klezmer-punk to Mount Tremper
Golem (photo provided)
Golem (photo provided)

The Mount Tremper Arts Summer Festival opens its first year Saturday with an evening party that includes a klezmer band whose unlikely namesake is the legendary Jewish Frankenstein of Prague