Difference between revisions of "Masada (1987 Levy), oratorio"

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==External links==
==External links==


[[Category:Fiction]] [[Category:Oratorios]]
[[Category:1987| Levy]]
[[Category:English language]]
 
[[Category:Made in the 1980s]]
[[Category:Jewish Authorship--1980s|1987 Levy]]
[[Category:Masada (subject)]]
[[Category:Jewish Authorship--English|1987 Levy]]
 
[[Category:Fiction--1980s|1987 Levy]]
[[Category:Fiction--English|1987 Levy]]
 
[[Category:Music--1980s|1987 Levy]]
[[Category:Oratorios|1987 Levy]]
 
[[Category:English language--1980s|1987 Levy]]
 
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--1980s|1987 Levy]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--Fiction|1987 Levy]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--English|1987 Levy]]
 
 
[[Category:Jewish War (subject)|1987 Levy]]
[[Category:Jewish War--fiction (subject)|1987 Levy]]
[[Category:Jewish War--music (subject)|1987 Levy]]
 
[[Category:Masada (subject)|1987 Levy]]
[[Category:Masada--fiction (subject)|1987 Levy]]
[[Category:Masada--music (subject)|1987 Levy]]

Latest revision as of 17:34, 22 December 2020

Masada (1987) is an oratorio by Martin David Levy (mus.).

Abstract

"Oratorio for tenor, speaker, chorus and orchestra." Text adapted by the composer from the Chronicles of Josephus, the Sabbath and Festival prayer book, excerpts from Emma Lazarus, Edward R. Murrow, Moshe Dayan and the poem of Isaac Lamdan

Editions, performances, translations

Published in New York, NY [America]: Boosey & Hawkes, 1987.

External links