Sam Glaser
Issue No. 66
May 2015

Happy Shavuot!

 

I just returned from North Carolina where I performed for the lovely communities of Charlotte and Raleigh.  I was whisked back to my childhood as I drove through the rolling hills where my father built his first garment factory.  Dense forests of towering deciduous trees and rich red clay soil, so unlike the chaparral of my native Southern California.  I have grown to love southern hospitality and was thrilled to sing for audiences that so readily were singing along.

 

I'm looking forward to a summer of California-based shows in LA, San Francisco, Sacramento and a wild Shabbaton at the High Sierra Music Festival just north of Reno.  Then off to New York, Boston and to Hartford for the annual NewCAJE Jewish educator's conference.  Finally I'm going to drag my wife on our anniversary weekend to my shows in Asheville and Boone, NC, both of which are quaint towns that I'm told will offer perfect romantic ambience for our celebration.  Lately my weekdays are spent slaving away over a hot mixing board producing albums for a wide variety of clients that inevitably become like family.  Got any music inside of you that you are burning to record?

 

Please enjoy my analysis of the upside to aging, Engage the Dying of the Light.  I wish all of you a happy, healthy Shavuot and a meaningful Memorial Day Weekend.

Towards the Dawn  

New CD and Download! 

 

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

Engage the Dying of the Light

by Sam Glaser

 

My father in law was an active music lover who regularly attended the LA Philharmonic, LA Opera and musicals at the Pantages Theater. He traveled the globe with his wife so frequently that we were never sure if they had disappeared on yet another trip when we couldn't reach them at home. Six months ago he went in to the hospital complaining of stomach pain.  The doctor wasn't sure how to alleviate his symptom but declared that his blood pressure was low and he needed an emergency pacemaker installed.  The next day the procedure was scheduled and by that afternoon he was comatose in the recovery room having suffered a significant stroke. It turns out that the doctor botched the surgery, attaching the lead wire to his vein instead of an artery and sending the resulting clots mainlining into poor grandpapa's brain. The hospital staff couldn't find the missing three liters of blood that they had to replace via a transfusion. Needless to say we immediately switched hospitals, found the missing blood in his chest cavity, had the unnecessary pacemaker removed and began the long road to recovery.

 

Six months later he is still not sure who we are when we visit. Instead of dwelling in his comfortable four-bedroom house in Marina Del Rey, he is the resident of a dementia ward in a nearby senior home.  He still has his sense of humor and can play a tango on the piano.  But he lives in a fog with no recollection from one moment to the next, no concept of time, no idea where his wife is or why he had been incarcerated in this lockdown facility.

 

My own father just had back surgery this week.  He had to shop around to nearly every top orthopedic surgeon in LA before he was able to find one willing to cut into his ailing eighty-five year old frame and repair three levels of his lumbar vertebrae.  Yes, we are nervous and concerned. Thank you for praying for his and my father-in-law's well being.  Your prayers matter! My dad's back is just one of the multitude of maladies that wreck his days and keep him swallowing Oxycontin. For all his health issues he still maintains his Dodger and Laker season tickets, trades on the stock market and teaches a monthly Jewish history class.  But his pleasure in life is intensely curtailed in what seems to be a cruel downward spiral of Job-like proportions.

 

I share with you this saga not only to urge you to appreciate your moments on this planet and hold the ones you love.  I also want to analyze why we might have to endure end of life agony and force our loved ones to witness the indignity of the ultimate ride. According to our tradition, the symptoms of old age were given to us due to the prayers of our forefather Avraham. He and his son Yitzchak looked so alike that they were indistinguishable and Avraham prayed that God should introduce gray hair and senior moments to differentiate the aged from the sprightly.  I'm sure his beautiful wife Sarah was thrilled when she suddenly became wrinkled. Many sages argue that Avraham was actually praying that mankind learn the important lesson of appreciating elders.  So we can say that at least there's a consolation prize to losing our ability to play tennis and surf...thanks to Avraham, we now know who to just honor, an important lesson in our youth driven culture.  

 

Clearly God wants us to value our precious time by limiting the amount we have.  Just like absolute power corrupts absolutely, an endless supply of time might cause us to take it for granted and ironically, cripple our ability to get anything done. The importance of gratitude seems to trump the value of longevity. Furthermore, since our health is a temporary asset, God created a scenario where we have to suck the marrow out of every life experience while we're still mobile.  Perhaps that's why we have this unique human quality of having regrets. One might wonder why so many of us remain couch potatoes in our youth in spite of the fact that at some point most of us will wind up couch bound. In one of the ski movies that I scored, narrator-producer Warren Miller exhorted the audience to get out and ski or "you'll just be another year older when you do."  My kids, who assume they are immortal, laugh at me when I beg them to join me on a hike, bike ride or to jump in the ocean. They return to their computer screens annoyed at the interruption, not realizing that at some point they will long for the day that their dad wanted to take them on an outing.  

 

Perhaps we must witness the demise of our loved ones in order to press us into real service and not lip service. After all, honoring parents made the top ten-commandment countdown!  What better way to demonstrate respect than when parents (who lovingly provided for your every need during your childhood) are now in need themselves. The mitzvah of visiting the sick is not for the sick...it's for those doing the visiting. In other words, the mitzvah is for you to empathize with suffering, to reclaim your humanity, to feel vulnerable and to give.  When your loved ones are really hurting you can't "outsource" the care that you give them.  We have doled out shifts to be with my dad post-surgery this week. I could perceive this responsibility as a burden or as an opportunity to be there for my sweet papa and to fulfill this awesome mitzvah.  When you have bedridden relatives and friends who really need you, human compassion transitions from the ephemeral to the actual; "The thought counts" is trumped by meaningful action.

 

Most of us are entirely focused on our careers or studies and find it difficult to carve out time for the acute needs of community or loved ones. When we do get called upon the subconscious reaction is usually, "what a damn inconvenience!"  God seems to throw these footballs in our lap so that we get off the treadmill for long enough to reassess our true goals.  Is it "he who dies with the most toys wins" or are we here to genuinely love and support one another?   Even the agnostic is filled with a sense of heavenly connection when he or she responds to a cry for help affirmatively. When I am vacillating between making the visit or passing the buck, I stop to think about what might be said when I am eulogized: that I pumped out yet another arrangement for a client's album or that I was always responsive to those in need? Another question that we are forced to grapple with due the fragility of human life: Do we really want to wait until our friends or loved ones are in the hospital before we take out some time to be with them and tell them how we feel?

 

I live in the land of smoke and mirrors, otherwise known as Tinseltown or La La Land.  Hollywood is all about looks, about the fa�ade.  Here, illness and death is hidden, spoken about in hushed tones and clever euphemisms.  When I walk down Rodeo or Beverly Drive I marvel at the carefully stretched grandmothers teetering on their stiletto heels donning colorful neck scarves and oversized sunglasses.  Who are they fooling?  These are the folks that will die in their oversized homes surrounded by paid caretakers...God forbid they become a burden or anyone witnesses their degradation.  I'm only realizing now that I am fortunate to have this degree of intimacy with my parents and in-laws.  If they were to suffer silently surrounded by wealth and the detachment that it can bring, I would never have this chance to get closer to them and respond to the call.

 

Understanding the greater role that aging and illness plays in society can offer perspective on how to behave when it's you who is injured. In the past, when I have been laid up, I have felt humiliated that I had to lean on my wife or kids to help me out.  It's not an enviable position to be in a place of weakness or the subject of pity.  Now I appreciate that my own malady gives others the chance to exercise patience, to perform acts of kindness.  I can use the same paradigm shift to be more compassionate with those who are down for the count.  Rather than see my dad as an accident prone annoyance, I can put myself in his shoes, imagining how scared he must be, how despondent he must feel with yet another system failing him, how preposterous it is that this one time captain of industry can't walk across the living room.  People in pain are typically ornery, throwing out barbs, frustrated and hopeless.  Caring for them is perhaps the best way to develop the crucial character traits of tolerance and compassion.  With this in mind, the most difficult patients can be seen as the most important for our personal growth, testing us to not be vengeful or drag our personal agendas into their care.

 

Another aspect of the inevitability of death is that it keeps humans humble.  We can never fully complete the task.  There is always so much more to learn, to experience. We come into this world wholly dependent on others and most of us leave the same way.  That's why it's called the "circle of life." Where there is humility there is Godliness.  It's our relentless ego that voids our spirituality.  We grapple with seeing our once superhero parents become so frail.  Soon it will be our turn.  I hope that our kids perceive that we treat our own folks with humility and patience and respond in kind when it's their turn.  I hope that my wife and I merit become seniors that are worthy of reverence and respect, emotionally healthy and peaceful.  I find it fascinating that just as my own kids become independent and need us less, that our parents are at the stage where they are becoming needy.  God continues to shower us with the gift of being needed!  Soon we'll have grandchildren hungry for attention, God willing!

 

In spite of his maladies my father still jokes that he wants to come with me on my concert tours or ski trips. Daddy, I'm so sorry...I wish that you could join me on my adventures.  I should have insisted when you could.  I want you to be out of pain, mobile, active.  I'm so lucky that I've had a loving, supportive, concerned dad for my half century on this earth.  I'm so frustrated that my prayers for your well-being seem fruitless. I so value your wisdom, your perspective, your newfound love of erudite four syllable words. Keep fighting that good fight, papa!  Rage against the dying of the light!  I remember the demise of your own mother, how you just wanted to hold her hand in the hospital and not let her go.  Daddy, I love you so much.  I don't want to let you go.  

 

Teenagers individuate, becoming rebellious, indifferent, callous or worse, so that the parents stop clinging long enough to throw them out of the house and on to their futures in college.  It's a force of nature that while challenging, is predictable and normal.  So too does God give us a body that gradually fails so that at the end of the story we are ready to leave it behind. This world is not the end of the journey.  It is but a corridor on the way to a brilliant future of our own making thanks to the acts of kindness and service to God that we accomplished while in this temporal form.  The "dying of the light" is all part of God's plan. God is good.  Life is good!  I say rage not...engage the dying of the light.

LA Show this Thursday!
We have a great new venue in the community and I need your support to make this evening amazing!  I have some epic musicians joining me and it will be a night to remember!  If you don't live in LA...tell someone who does.  Thanks, my friends.

Advance tickets here! 
Announcing the 2015  Rock Your Life Tour!


NOW BOOKING!
The Rock Your Life Tour will be rolling into over fifty cities around the world over 2015. 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 SamJeans Glaser program a win-win, profitable smash hit! Save by taking advantage of add-on shows when Sam is in your area:

LA, CA
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Click here for a list of Sam's performance and workshop options and here for the full schedule. Contact  Marcia to make your dream event a reality!
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2013-2014: A Three Minute Summary
Yerushalayim Shel Zahav in honor of Yom Ha'atzma'ut
Yerushalayim Shel Zahav in honor of Yom Ha'atzma'ut
Eicha by Sam Glaser
Eicha by Sam Glaser

This Month at 
Recording Studio 

 

Josh Warshawsky is a super talented LA based singer-songwriter who is recording his debut CD. We are about to start basic tracks on his songs inspired by Jewish liturgy and I'm confident that this album will be a Jewish smash hit.  Help fund his Jewcer campaign here!  Keep your eyes open for this up and coming Jewish performer.

 

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. Features the hits Dancing in Jerusalem, Mezuza, Simple Song for Israel, Im Eshkacheich and the title track. 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."
-Laurette Katz
The Possible You
is for YOU!  
Presented by 
Sam Glaser 
in Los Angeles
June 15-18

 

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 Tanach. 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!    

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The Friendship Circle's mission is (1) to provide Jewish children who have special needs with a full range of social, recreational, educational and Judaic experiences; (2) to provide their parents with respite and support; and (3) to enrich, inspire and motivate Jewish teenagers through sharing of themselves with others.  My own kids have been volunteers with this remarkable organization and I have had many opportunities to perform for them.  There are few more worthy and heartwarming programs to support.  Do it today!
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
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Los Angeles, California 90034

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