Jump to content

Mark Olf: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Jmolf (talk | contribs)
m →‎About: All of the sections are "about" Mark Olf. The heading "Overview" more accurately describes this paragraph, which addresses Olf's life & career in a broad brushstroke.
m Content from User:Jmolf/sandbox
Line 38: Line 38:
==Smithsonian Folkways records==
==Smithsonian Folkways records==
*'''Jewish Folksongs, Vol. 1''' <br /> Released 1951 <br /> FW06826
*'''Jewish Folksongs, Vol. 1''' <br /> Released 1951 <br /> FW06826
*'''Jewish Folk Songs, Vol. 2''' <br /> Released 1954 <br /> FW06827
*'''Jewish Folk Songs, Vol. 2''' <br /> Released 1954 <br /> FW06827
*'''Hebrew Folk Songs''' <br /> Released 1957 <br /> FW06928
*'''Hebrew Folk Songs''' <br /> Released 1957 <br /> FW06928
*'''Yiddish Folk Songs for Children''' <br /> Released 1960 <br /> FW07234
*'''Yiddish Folk Songs for Children''' <br /> Released 1960 <br /> FW07234

Revision as of 19:28, 14 April 2012

Mark Olf
Birth nameMark Olf
Born(1905-05-15)May 15, 1905
Bielsk, Russia
DiedJune 7, 1987(1987-06-07) (aged 82)
New York City
Occupation(s)Folksinger and Recording Artist
Instrument(s)Guitar, Vocals
Years active1951–1987
LabelsFolkways Records

Mark Olf (May 15, 1905 - June 7, 1987) was a Jewish folksinger and recording artist. Accompanying himself on the guitar, Olf documented and preserved Yiddish and Hebrew folksongs, many of which he had heard as a child in Russia.

Overview

Olf recorded his first album on the Folkways Records label in 1951. Over the next decade he recorded three albums of Yiddish songs and one of Hebrew songs - in all, fifty-one songs, some of which had not previously been heard in the United States.[1] Olf toured the country, performing his music through the sponsorship of the Jewish Center Lecture Bureau of the National Jewish Welfare Board.[2] His live and recorded performances were periodically broadcast on WEVD, New York City’s Jewish radio station. He was the author of Spanish Guitar Technique: A Practical Approach to the Art of Finger Playing for Self-Accompaniment, Classical and Flamenco Guitar."[3] In addition to teaching guitar privately, he taught the instrument at the Henry Street Settlement, Queens College and the University of Rhode Island.[4] In 1987, the Smithsonian Institution acquired the Folkways Record Company and made a commitment to keeping available all recordings in the Folkways catalogue.[5] Olf died without knowing that his music had become part of the nation's archives and would remain available in perpetuity.

Early years and career

The son of Jacob Olf and Ida Krantz, Mark Olf was born in Bielsk, then a part of the Russian empire near Bialystok and the Belaruse border. During the First World War, when Olf was in his early teens, he emigrated with his parents and his brothers, Abraham and Harold, to the United States, where they became naturalized citizens and settled on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Another brother, George, was born in 1922. As a youth, Olf enjoyed exercising police horses on the Coney Island beach, sparring with Golden Gloves boxers and acting in the 2nd Avenue Yiddish theater. He learned automotive trades in his late-teens and, from 1929 to 1937, was the proprietor of an automobile repair and service station at the foot of the Brooklyn Bridge.[6] When the United States entered the Second World War, Olf served as an instructor of automotive trades to U.S. servicemen. At the time he met his future wife, the pianist Rubia Goldman, he was studying the violin. His avowed artistic interest, however, was playing the guitar and singing Yiddish folk music. The two married in 1938, and Olf launched his career as a folksinger - largely supported by his wife who, after receiving a Graduate Degree in Music Education, taught music for the New York City Board of Education. Rubia Olf also wrote the translations and transliterations for liner notes that accompanied Olf’s recordings.

Later years and career

In the late-thirties, the Olfs moved to Knickerbocker Village on New York City’s Lower East Side, and they had two children, Julian (b. 1942) and Jonathan (b. 1944). In 1952 the family moved to Queens (first Kew Gardens Hills, then Woodside). During summers in the 50’s, Olf was the sing leader at the Educational Alliance’s Surprise Lake Camp, in Cold Spring, New York. He also sang periodically at the Workmen’s Circle camp in Hopewell Junction, New York, and at the Jewish collective, Camp Woodland, in Englewood, New Jersey. Olf’s cherished pastimes included composing music to his wife’s lyrics,[7] studying classical flute, listening to Mahler music, participating in the New York Mandolin Orchestra and composing music for verse by the Moldavian poet, David Seltzer.[8] Olf’s memorial ceremony was held on June 25, 1987 at the Hebrew Actors Union Building, New York City.

Smithsonian Folkways records

  • Jewish Folksongs, Vol. 1
    Released 1951
    FW06826
  • Jewish Folk Songs, Vol. 2
    Released 1954
    FW06827
  • Hebrew Folk Songs
    Released 1957
    FW06928
  • Yiddish Folk Songs for Children
    Released 1960
    FW07234

References

  1. ^ Smithsonian Folkways Listing for Mark Olf.Folkways
  2. ^ The Jewish arts: A directory of artists represented by Jewish Center Lecture Bureau of the National Jewish Welfare Board, available in Harvard University Library, Harvard
  3. ^ Spanish Music Center (New York, 1960).
  4. ^ NY Times obituary, June 13, 1987, in New York Times
  5. ^ Letter in family papers dated April 6, 1987, from the Smithsonian Institution to all Folkways Record Company artists. Letter signed by Ralph Rinzler, Assistant Secretary for Public Service.
  6. ^ Dates of proprietorship from copy of an application for a Teacher In Training License, Board of Education of the City of New York, December 27, 1937, in family papers. Also in the family papers there is a photograph of Olf standing in front of "Olf's Service Station" - and one of him exercising a police horse on the beach at Coney Island.
  7. ^ See Catalog of Copyright Entries, in Google Books
  8. ^ Olf and Seltzer wrote the music and lyrics to ten modern songs from Moldavia. These appeared in a booklet published by the Jewish Music Alliance, Copyright 1972 by Mark Olf and David Seltzer, in Digital Library

Template:Persondata