Sam Glaser
Issue No. 54
March 2014

Shalom Friends!

 

Purim is coming! Everyone's favorite holiday! Purim is usually a workday for me and this year will be no exception. I'm going from a gig in LA to one in New Jersey and then flying that afternoon to party on Shushan Purim in Jerusalem. That makes for about 72 hours of celebration. Yeah! I'm excited to report that after I sober up I'll be spending a the rest of the week at the wedding and sheva brachot (seven days of celebration) of my dear Chassidic niece Ruti and her handsome, musical, mountain biking groom Udi! My Heart is Dancing in Jerusalem!

 

Speaking of Dancing in Jerusalem, my new video is quickly moving towards Jewish viral status...over 1,000 hits a day, 20,000 total to date...watch out Gangnam Style! I get great joy knowing that viewers are sharing my love for the Promised Land and laughing at my dance steps. Thanks for your help in spreading the good word.

 

Other news: I'm being honored at a banquet!! Young Israel-Aish Las Vegas is giving me their Power of One award and my full band is playing the gala. Wow. If you can't make it to Vegas for the event on March 30th, please consider saying mazeltov in the banquet journal by clicking here. All donations to this wonderful shul $25 and over will be acknowledged in the book and make me smile!

 

I just confirmed a two-week tour in Australia this coming June where I have shows everyday including performances for Limmud OZ, the US Consulate and the Australian Jewish Choral Festival. I'll be back in lovely Virginia Beach for the High Holidays, God willing. Looks like I'll be spending Chanukah in the NY/NJ area so please, East Coast friends, reserve your eight Rockin' Chanukah nights now!

 

Help needed: I'm still looking for a great gig for Israel Independence Weekend May 2-6th.

 

Enjoy the videos of the month and my article below about the mysterious message of Purim. I hope all of you have a powerful, joyous holiday experience with the nachas of generous gifts to the needy, celebrations with friends and designated drivers.

 

Sincerely, 
Sam
Towards the Dawn Tour 2014
NOW BOOKING!
The Towards the Dawn Tour is rolling into over fifty cities around the world this year.  Sam is featuring the music from his new CDs plus all his classics in feel good, rockin' concerts for all ages. Please join us for guaranteed peak experiences for your community from one of the veteran performers of Jewish music.  Event programmers: use our know-how to help you make a Sam Glaser
SamJeans
program a win-win, profitable smash hit! Save by taking advantage of discounted shows when Sam is in your area:

Las Vegas, NV
LA, CA
New Jersey
New York
Jerusalem
Kansas City
Australia
Virginia Beach

Click here for a list of Sam's performance and workshop options and click here for the full schedule; dates are added weekly. 

Towards the Dawn 

I'm happy to report that my classically inspired collaboration with concert pianist Sha-rone Kushnir is getting rave reviews!  Towards the Dawn picks up where the first Edge of Light album left off: over seventy minutes of powerful, spiritual renditions of my most meaningful songs in a simple, dramatic piano, violin and vocal setting.  Support new Jewish music!  Order yours today!   

 

"I just finished listening to your new CD. To say it is great is the understatement of the year. It is a collection of amazing renditions of your songs. It is pure delight. Every song is special, every song is moving, every song is uplifting. And then, to wrap it up, Blessings, with all the voices harmonizing together, is "goosebumping!"   -Sandra Lillienthal

 

"There are moments in this CD that are so awesome that they take my breath away. The juxtaposition of musical styles is so effortless, the improvisation virtuosic, and Sam's voice is once again a soothing companion in the soundtrack of my life." -Libby Berman

 

"Sam, you've done it again.  You are easily the most prolific and accomplished Jewish composer we have.  Thanks for the incredible music." -Shai Sternberg

Hidden Miracles

By Sam Glaser

 

The other night over tofu curry my wife was explaining the concept of fiscal vs. calendar years to my kids. Times they are a-changing: my seventeen-year-old Jesse just opened his own E-Trade account so that he can play the market on his own. He used to hunt bugs in the backyard; now he's studying corporate cash flow! She told him that most individuals in the US seem to follow the January to December calendar model, making January the back to work month following a holiday vacation and a drunken New Years Eve. My dad's swimwear business went summer to summer since we shipped everything by May and then had to figure out what to do the next season.

 

We then discussed that most synagogues work on a fiscal year that begins with the High Holidays since that's when they put on the "big show" for the crowds of the penitent and do most of their fundraising. That schedule holds true in my business also since my gigs follow the ebb and flow of synagogue life. It seems to make sense to start the Jewish calendar year on Rosh Hashana, literally the "head of the year," but indeed, that's not how it goes in the bible. In fact, just as we are about to leave Egypt with great signs and wonders, our first commandment as a nation is to keep a calendar. Once we become free men and women, we are personally accountable for the passage of our time and must learn to use it wisely. We also have to know when the fifteenth of the month is so that we can properly conduct our national homecoming party, the seder. Therefore the Jewish year actually begins in Nissan, the month of Pesach, which makes this month, Adar, the last month of the year and both a time to party and a season of reckoning.

 

What exactly we're supposed to be feeling in this final month of the calendar is concealed behind the mask of our beloved Adar holiday, Purim. Yes, it's a great holiday for kids but the real magic requires deeper analysis. The scroll that we are commanded to read, Megilat Esther is one of the final entries in the chronology of the Jewish biblical canon and interestingly, has no mention of God's name. We start the year with the Pesach Haggadah and it's manifold recitations of gratitude to God for the plethora of miracles performed on our behalf. Missing from this text is the mention of the story's hero, Moshe! By the end of the Jewish calendar year, no discussion of God and it's all about Queen Esther. What has changed? Evidently over the Jewish year we move from emphasis to God's revealed hand in our redemption (Exodus) to a focus on the action of individuals with God operating behind the scene (Esther). I think the message here is that God is always with us even when that isn't clear, and that we've got to get into the game.

 

The rabbis teach that the ten plagues in Egypt transpired over a nine-month period. This was our national gestation; we morph from Avraham and Sarah's mishpocha (family) into a great, holy nation. Over the course of the next few millennia we read about the fits and starts of our spiritual adolescence traveling to and living in Israel and then finally, by the time of Esther, we renew our covenant as adults. No more need for coercion, no more need to have Mount Sinai held over our heads, we accept the yoke of the commandments willingly and with joy, knowing that God's intimate Presence follows us wherever we wander. In fact, the title of our text holds the answer to the puzzle of Jewish survival through this long exile: Megilat Esther can be translated as "revealing the hidden," it's a lesson plan in adopting a world view where we perceive God's hand behind all events.

 

Therefore, the vibe of this month of Adar is to bask in the emunah (faith) that we have crafted over the Jewish calendar year. Every holiday that transpires, beginning with our national homecoming (Pesach), reenacting the receiving of Torah (Shavuot) and then the High Holidays, serves to build this invisible shield of Divine love and protection. By the time we're getting ready for Purim we rejoice in the seemingly "God-less" story knowing firmly in our hearts that God's grace is behind all the events in our lives. In fact, the word emunah alludes to "craftsmanship," sharing the same root as the word "amanut," the arts and crafts that we used to do at camp. The subliminal effect of full immersion in the Jewish holiday cycle forms a level of belief that is real, tactile, or as my Rosh Yeshiva used to say, offers "five finger clarity."

 

One of the gifts of Judaism is the feeling that we are part of a big-picture national destiny, that time is marching towards a goal and we are here as Jews to do our part to bring that ultimate tikkun olam, or fixing of the world. When one is focused on a greater goal, the day-to-day mishaps become trivial. This eschatological passion has kept the Jews on track through millennia of abuse and deprivation. As Monty Python's Black Knight might have said, "it's just a flesh wound." That's because in our hearts we know we're on an important mission as a people and that God is cleverly guiding history towards a powerful goal. When Queen Esther is given the chance by Uncle Mordechai to be the hero, he warns her: if you don't take a stand here, our salvation will come from somewhere else. In other words, as Jews we can opt in to this great adventure or relegate ourselves to the sidelines. God will get the job done regardless. I say: let's get on the playing field and go for it! My generation is sadly, for the most part, opting out and it is this bitter fact that keeps me packing my bags for yet another trip rather than sitting in the comfort of my recording studio.

 

There's another aspect to this evolution that began with overt miracles to God's working subtly behind the scene. Imagine that you are imprisoned and have a prison guard right outside the cell. Obviously with the watchful guard on the scene you are on your best behavior. When the guard goes on rounds, however, that's when you can do headstands, scrawl graffiti or go back to digging that escape hole with a spoon. The God of Nissan is an overwhelming presence that limits our freedom of choice, whereas the God of Adar gives us the space to express the fullness of our human gift of choice. I believe that all history is following this same principle and more than ever we live in age where we are stratified into believers and "secular." That intelligent people can deny God's presence fills me with mirth. Just look at how powerful God is, like the guard on his rounds, giving us the freedom to perceive God, or not. Amazing!

 

I also see a remarkable shift of the power center of humanity moving from a single leader into the hands of the masses. In fact, Judaism teaches that we are on a continuous down-slope of leadership as we move farther from Sinai. But there is a simultaneous elevation of the individual as we move towards our ultimate redemption. The internet is one of the best examples of this modern revolution of self-empowerment. As of 2014 the majority of folks in the developed world have smartphones in their pockets. That means they have Google readily available for any question under the sun, not to mention the over a million remarkable apps at their bidding. When our greatest leader Moshe Rabbeinu came down from Mt. Sinai his face was glowing. His light was so bright that he had to wear a mask just to deal with the regular folk. Perhaps Moshe had to die before they went into the Land of Israel so that the Jews would learn to stand on their own two feet and become leaders in their own right. Hold up a candle in daylight and it's light is irrelevant...but in a darkened room it can light the way. Fast forward three millennia and we have democracy, ipads and near total literacy. Our leaders may not be as monumental as those of the bible or even those of our previous generations but we live at a time when more than ever, every individual soul can shine.

 

The most important theme of this, our final month of the year, is that of joy. Living in a state of simple faith brings on the greatest joy. The month of Adar is the capitol of joy and Purim is its headquarters. At the end of days our sages tell us that Purim will be one of the only holidays that we celebrate. Because it's all about joy in the end. We're commanded to lessen our joy in the month of Av since we commemorate the loss of our national sovereignty and our beloved Temple. When Adar comes in we're told to increase our joy. Reading between the lines reveals that we must ALWAYS be joyous. Lessening joy means we're still serving God with joy! All the disasters foretold in our Torah occur because we forget to serve God with joy. When our service becomes a burden...look out! The true goal of Adar is seeing that the seeming "bad" breaks in our lives are all for our good, that we must accept them without despair. Jews can never despair. Gam zeh l'tova...this is also for the good. It's one level to have acceptance. The Adar challenge is to accept pain with JOY.

 

Seven times every nineteen years our rabbis instituted a system of leap years to keep our lunar calendar in sync with the solar calendar. This is required because according to the Torah, Nissan, the season of our redemption, must occur in the spring. Some argue that the rabbis chose the month of Adar to double because it is the last month of the year. I believe that there is more to it. If one is choosing which month to double, make it the most joyous of months! Imagine a double Av...yuck! Furthermore, when we get the chance to go through an experience a second time we can enjoy it so much more. We may have "been there, done that." But if we take advantage of even more wisdom and perspective the second time around it's much more powerful. In this case, Adar 2 can double our joyful emunah!  The Talmud debates whether it is better to seize the day and celebrate Purim in the first Adar. It then concludes that it is more important to celebrate in the second month of Adar in order to maintain its thirty-day proximity to Pesach. That way our holidays of redemption at the end and beginning of our canonic saga are juxtaposed. Just like we go right from finishing the Torah on Simchat Torah to starting immediately with Breshit (Genesis), we flow from our cycle of God's hiddeness right into a deeper appreciation of God's light revealed.

 

I urge you to go to a place where Purim is celebrated with joyful abandon. If you live in LA...just walk Pico Boulevard. Take advantage of the transformative power of the four mitzvot on this special day: hear the megila, give substantially to the needy, give a few items of food as a token of friendship and eat a hearty meal at the end of the day. For many of us, intoxication gets us to a place where the heart is opened, we love more readily and tears of joy can flow. For some of us getting intoxicated is a mistake. I find that when I've had a few l'chaims my empathy muscle is stronger and charity becomes more natural. Maybe walk over to a 7-11 and take care of the people outside. Acknowledge the miracle of God's stewardship in the your life. Take a stand for a friend with a gift of food, the gift of time and a patient ear. Be deeply grateful for the feeling of belongingness to this remarkable nation. Make this Purim the day you emulate Queen Esther, becoming an integral part of the solution to the issues that face our people and the entire world.



Like us on Facebook    Follow us on Twitter
 
 
Sam at the Piano
Sam with Kids
Sam with the Orchestra
New Monthly Jam in LA! 
Join us this Wednesday, March 12th at Morry's in Pico-Robertson! Full band!
Refreshments served!
8:30pm-11, $10
9118 W. Pico Blvd
March Videos
Sam Glaser - Dancing in Jerusalem
Sam Glaser - Dancing in Jerusalem
Sam Glaser - Dancing in Jerusalem - With Lyrics
Sam Glaser - Dancing in Jerusalem - With Lyrics
Purim Animated
Purim Animated
 
Jewish a cappella music group Shir Soul -
Jewish a cappella music group Shir Soul - "Adon Olam"
This Month at 
Recording Studio

 

Singer/songwriter/guitarist is a young triple threat musician from Jacksonville, Michael Wohl.  He is flying into LA this week to make the album of his dreams.  His songs are so cool and ready for a full band, radio-ready production. Can you tell I'm excited? Basic tracks with recording legend drummer Dave Hooper and bassist Jerry Watts start next week. 

Praise for The Promise!
Promise CD
Sam's The Promise CD is a hit!  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
The Possible You
is for YOU!  
Presented by 
Sam Glaser
April 6-8 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 eighteen hour presentation 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 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. You can also bring The Possible You to your own city by signing up a minimum of only twenty paid participants. 

Register today!    

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!"  
Tzedakah of the Month: 

The needy on Purim!
 
 
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

Save 25%-50%

Quantity purchases are the way to go at samglaser.com.  We have made it easy to save big money on CDs and digital downloads. As always, we offer a free full length CD with each CD order, only $5 US shipping per order and we pay sales tax!  Best of all, we encourage gift giving with compelling quantity discounts: 

Spend $50 save 25%
Spend $140 save 35%
Spend $240 save 50%

 

Visit samglaser.com for details