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Shalom Friends!
I just returned from another wonderful trip to Florida where I offered the Daytona Beach community a Shabbaton of the Soul. They voted on the thirty or so workshops on my website and chose the "Discovering the Boundaries of the Soul" option. Well, our souls were on fire with powerful prayer services, words from the heart and then a standing-room-only concert with singing that shook the rafters. The fluorescent lights in the synagogue couldn't dim, but at times like this it's better to see the smiles of your audience rather than the glare of a spotlight. Thanks again to Rabbi Kane and the groovy Jews of Daytona and Ormand Beach.
I called a friend to get together in nearby Orlando the next night who said, sorry Sam, I can't...I'm going to see Paul McCartney. "What?" I replied, "you're going to see Sir Paul? Well then I'm going too!" Thanks to Craigslist I snagged a last minute single ticket, worked my way to tenth row center and danced for nearly three hours of an impeccable performance by one of the greatest singer/songwriters in history. The band was smashing, the lights and video were nothing short of awesome and Paul's voice was in great shape on this second night of his Summer tour. Not to be missed if he comes to your town. Yes, I shot that picture!
June and July are home-bound months; I'm looking forward to putting the finishing touches on a few albums for clients and dusting off my own Edge of Light Volume 2 project. My kids are off to camp in a few weeks, back to Moshava Wisconsin where they have flourished over the past decade. Marcia is scrambling to get my fall/winter concert tour dates in order and deal with the logistics of a very busy August that includes stops at NewCAJE, the Berkshires, Boston, Lake Tahoe and possibly Chicago. I'm excited to be returning to Virginia Beach for the High Holidays where I'll be serving Temple Emanuel for the third year.
Please take a minute to enjoy my essay below on the joys of Mincha, the afternoon service, check out some comedy videos for May and learn about our Tzedakah of the Month, Tikva Odessa.
Have a great summer!
Sam
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The Promise Tour 2013-2014
The Promise Tour is off and running. Sam is featuring the music from his new CD plus all his classics in feel good, rockin' concerts for all ages. Guaranteed peak experiences for your community from one of the veteran performers of Jewish music. Make it a fundraiser and use our know-how to help you make the event a win-win, profitable smash hit! Save by taking advantage of discounted shows when Sam is in your area: 
Berkshires, MA Boston, MA
Sacramento, CA Birmingham, AL Chatanooga, TN
Birmingham, AL
Nashville, TN
Click here for a list of Sam's performance and workshop options and click here for the full schedule; dates are added weekly.
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Praise for The Promise!
Sam's The Promise CD is out! This all new release is a celebration of the connection of the Jewish People with the Israel. Nearly two years in the making, these moving, rocking, inspiring songs feature Sam's amazing band and an array of guest vocalists. Now available online for $9.99 and CDs only $14.99. Support the cause! You'll love it!
"Sam, I have all of your albums and keep them in heavy rotation on my Sunday SImcha show. I think The Promise is the best yet. Cutting edge and so powerful."
Kevin Frye, WMNF-88.5 FM Tampa, FL
"Yashar koach on the album - it's amazing!"
-Miriam Van Raalte
"I'm not sure how you do it. The Promise is a work of art. Every song touches my deepest feelings about Israel. There is so much wisdom in your lyrics. I know this sounds clich� but I am getting chills every time I listen."
-Fred Warner
"The Promise is awesome (as usual!) It will make a perfect gift to just about everyone I know."
-Cantor Risa Askin
"I can't begin to find the words to express how much I totally enjoy your work. Your voice, songs and arrangements are all just amazing. What a gift."
-Piper Lori
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2 Cool New Compilation CDs for Your Collection!
I have been involved with two wonderful new CD projects: the first is a retrospective of the life of Jewish troubadour Moshe Yess. It is an immaculately produced 2 CD set compiled by legendary singer Gershon Veroba. I'm singing "Miser of the Town," a great song about tzedakah and judging others with merit.
The other album just came out in perfect time for S'firat Ha'omer. The A Capella Treasury Yom Tov has a collection of 21 amazing tracks from the finest a capella groups in the country. My contribution is a new a capella rendition of my Yom Tov Nigun, featuring cameos by Blue Fringe's Dov Rosenblatt and Cantor Arik Wollheim.
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Mincha Mincha
By Sam Glaser
As a teenager I remember the call as I walked down Kikar Tziyon (Zion Square) in Jerusalem. The call of "Mincha, Mincha," rang out from the entrance of a small storefront shul. I would do my best to avoid the squat elderly man with a thick Sephardic accent that beckoned in the doorway. God forbid I have my afternoon fun interrupted with 10 minutes of boredom as I stood there pretending to pray. As a young traveler I did not have any tradition of the afternoon prayer ritual. At that point in my life I was aware of Shachrit, the morning service which I avoided since I saw it as far too long and inconvenient. I was familiar with Ma'ariv, the evening service from Friday nights at Camp Ramah. But Mincha? No, Mincha was a foreign word to me, lost in the same summertime wasteland that claimed Shavuot, S'firat Ha'Omer and the "Three Weeks." If it was left out of our annual Hebrew School lexicon it couldn't be something I needed to worry about.
All that changed after a eye-opening trip to Israel in my twenties when I fell in love with text study and Shabbat. At that point I hungered for more connection as long as the rituals didn't take too much of my valuable time. I was careful to manage the balance of You-ish and Jew-ish: Too much of this Judaism thing might make me a freak, but a short minimum daily requirement promised to hedge my bets. Over the next several years wrapping tefilin in the mornings became a cherished habit and gave me the discipline to chew on those thorny Hebrew paragraphs until they were smooth like the worn black leather on my arm.
Mincha followed later. Much later. After all, who has the time mid-afternoon to stop all the action to pray? Didn't we just say those same words in the morning? I'm a busy recording professional with clients and deadlines. I owe it to my customers to be focused on their music and not shuckling away in some secret hiding place.
Two factors inspired me to make Mincha the centerpiece of my day. The first is my limited attention span. I'm a believer in "living by the mitzvot," in other words, if I feel a certain mitzvah is "killing" me, I feel no remorse in minimizing it. Shachrit takes a long time and when I'm davening on my own, I take liberties with shortening the Pseukei D'zimra (opening prayers of praise,) for example. Mincha fits in this perfect 5-10 minute window of opportunity where I can dive in and then re-enter the workday.
Another factor is the power of consciously unplugging from my work to plug into my relationship with God. After I received my undergrad degree from the University of Colorado Business School I pondered continuing my education with an MBA. Many of my peers recommended that I should get some work experience in my father's garment business and only then go back for an advanced degree. True, the MBA curriculum wouldn't change, but I would change in that I would be better equipped to know what questions I had to ask and what real world business challenges needed to be overcome. Mincha is the same way...you are already out on the test track of life. In the morning your day is theoretical. By Mincha time, you know exactly what you are up against. For me, that creates more intense, deeply felt prayer.
In fact, interrupting the workflow has it's own celestial merit. We are told in the Ethics of the Fathers that we are not free to desist from the work at hand but we should not feel compelled to finish it. As Rabbi Joe Black says, we must "leave a little bit undone." A spiritual person has no qualms about asking for God's help, bringing one's Partner in Heaven into a very tangible relationship in all endeavors. Taking that break before the sun goes down on my workday allows me to fill my prayer with specific requests based on what I'm going through at the time.
Our thrice daily prayer ritual reflects the contributions of each of our three forefathers. Avraham gave us the custom of Shachrit due to his early morning service reported in the Torah. Yaakov gave us Ma'ariv due to his intense nighttime experience on Har HaMoriah dreaming of ladders stretching up to heaven. We have Yitzchak to thank for Mincha. He is described as "conversing in the field" before the sun set when his besheret Rivka gets a glimpse of him for the first time. Likely this 30-something young man was praying hard for a wife. It's no wonder that we too are "in the field" when we daven Mincha, either in the agricultural sense toiling the ground by the "sweat of our brow" or in whatever "field" we are engaged.
Yitzchak's quintessential quality was gevurah or strength/discipline. That makes perfect sense in that this easily overlooked prayer service requires supernal discipline to break away from the matter at hand. Once you get the ball rolling it's hard to stop. Halacha demands that we do Shachrit before we eat breakfast which I believe is a great tactic to make sure we "wrap up" before we get wrapped up in our day. Once we get started in our eating/commuting/work routine it's easy to forget matters of the spirit. Mincha, on the other hand MUST by definition interrupt the daily flow, and that takes tremendous discipline to achieve on a regular basis.
Mincha has three primary facets: Ashrei, a prayer where we butter God up, the Amidah where we ask for whatever we need, and then the Aleynu where we conclude by praying for God's oneness and Tikkun Olam, the healing of the world. One might think we have already praised God so much in the morning that no more praise is needed, but the rabbis gave us the custom of a third repetition of King David's Ashrei to get back into a mindset of gratitude. The popular Artscroll prayer book asks the reader to "concentrate intently" in only one sentence of the entire siddur, and that is the "Poteyach et yadecha" line of the Ashrei. This single sentence sets us up for a powerful prayer moment: God opens his hand and satisfies the desire of every living thing. When I'm hustling midday for gigs, when I'm feeling jealous of peers, when it seems that we'll never have enough cash flow, I read this line and feel comfort. That, my friends, is reason enough to do Mincha.
Another feature of this special line is the idea that God satisfies the desire of those with "chai ratzon," in other words, those who have a will that is alive. So much of our day is often spent in repetitive tasks and drudgery. We take the same way to work every day, eat the same lunch, see the same faces. Our fire is slowly extinguished by the repetition of the "daily grind" and that ennui can soon turn into hopelessness. The idea of this line of the Ashrei is that YOU must take responsibility for keeping your will alive. Only you can change things around. Take a different way to work, get together with old friends, rediscover activities you enjoy, get physical rather than passive in front of a screen watching TV or a Facebook feed. Being truly alive requires more than just food, water and an occasional jaunt on a treadmill.
In fact, Mincha offers the chance to flex our "will muscle" in the form of the Amidah where we align our personal will with the will of our Creator. (See my May 2012 newsletter on the power of the Amidah and it's nineteen blessings.) For the advanced davener there is also the chance to have a daily Yom Kippur moment in the form of the brief Tachanun prayers. Finally, Mincha closes with the Aleynu, sending you back to the office with a reiteration of our Jewish mission statement and the satisfaction that you have just completed a sweet and vital mitzvah.
I often hear friends wish for more opportunities for spirituality, complaining that they don't get uplifted from organized religion. They are put off by synagogue dues and politics, can't relate to clergy or don't feel the need to affiliate. Well, Mincha offers a spiritual high and requires only a quiet place to concentrate. What better way to spend 5-10 minutes than connecting with your Creator, analyzing your life, expressing thanks, keeping your precious will alive. Now whenever I see the sun starting to set I hear that clarion call of "Mincha, Mincha" in my mind and I joyfully respond with gratitude for another chance to dance with my Partner in Heaven.
(For those who understand Hebrew, the full text of Mincha is here. For those who don't, I recommend this siddur with the English underneath every word.)
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This Month at

Leah Wolff is a multi-talented singer-songwriter from the Albany area of New York. I heard her perform last summer and said, "you must get in the studio!" Thankfully she took me up on it and flew out to LA for some serious sessions that feature Moshav Band's Tamir Barzilay on drums, Saul Kaye on guitar and Janis Ian's bass player, Chad Watson. I'm nearly done with a sweet ten song album of her beautiful Jewish music. Keep your eyes open for this August release of powerful and soul-stirring music. 
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The Possible You
is for YOU!
Presented by
Sam Glaser
August 4-6 in LA!
The Possible You is a groundbreaking seminar that creates the space for participants to realize their unlimited potential. It is rapidly growing in popularity in Israel, the US, UK and Canada. There are now 2200 supercharged alumni worldwide that credit The Possible You with initiating brilliance in their lives.
With an intensely paced delivery of profound insights coupled with music, visual aids and group sharing, a crucial set of life tools are communicated to the full spectrum of learners in all modalities. Originated by renown Jerusalem-based teacher Rabbi Yom Tov Glaser, The Possible You is an amalgamation of the wisdom of kabbalah, mussar and contemporary transformation technologies. While its message and mode of delivery is tailor-made for the Jewish soul, The Possible You is available for people of all backgrounds.
Sam Glaser has been working hand in hand with his brother Yom Tov to customize the seminar for American students. He meticulously follows the established Possible You syllabus while giving the sessions his unique spin. Let us help you make arrangements in LA to attend. Register today!
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May Videos!
Comedy Time
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Comedy routine of a chazan (cantor) on audition Shepsil Kanarek
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Comedy: Mark Schiff on What to Say to the Doctor
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The 2000 year old man receives clean bill of health
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Sign up for Sam's
Living Inspired Weekly Email!
Need a great uplift from one of today's Torah giants? How about some great fodder for conversation at your Shabbat table? Sam sends out a weekly email with a compilation of his favorite words of Torah based on that week's Torah portion, culled from his favorite writers. Simply send an email and say, "put me on the weekly list!"
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Tzedakah of the Month:
Tikva Odessa Orphanage
Last month I had the great opportunity to perform for the annual UK banquet supporting this amazing organization. Tikva's core mission is to care for the homeless, abandoned and abused Jewish children of Ukraine and neighboring regions of the former Soviet Union. Tikva provides a warm, compassionate home, essential social services and a quality education, while revitalizing the growing Jewish community of Odessa. In addition, Tikva offers its graduates the opportunity for a brighter future through university education in Odessa or immigration to Israel, where Tikva continues its educational and supportive services.
While they currently have over 300 children in the home they have determined that there are another 2500 kids in desperate need of their services. I personally asked the rabbi if this number is accurate and he said it's an understatement. Please give what you can.
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Thank you!
Thank you for reading, for listening, for your support and friendship.
Glaser Musicworks 800-972-6694 Outside of the US 310-204-6111 sam@samglaser.com 1941 Livonia Av. Los Angeles, California 90034
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