Yosl and the Yingels balance classic klezmer with modern jazz in their debut EP

The group is one of the few secular bands writing original Yiddish songs in Toronto.
Joseph Landau, right, and Jacob Gorzhaltsan are members of Yosl and the Yingels, a new Yiddish-singing band whose debut EP, Zikhroynes, comes out Nov. 15, 2024. (Supplied photo)

This podcast is a proud media partner of Jewish Futures, a day-long arts and culture salon for Jewish arts workers, hosted by the UJA Federation of Greater Toronto on Nov. 24. The 2024 program emphasizes networking, communal learning and the exploration of Jewish artistic identity, providing a foundation for building resilience and leadership for Toronto’s Jewish cultural community. Learn more and get your tickets here.

Joseph Landau didn’t grow up speaking Yiddish—but something about the language compelled him. Whenever he spent time with his grandfather, Landau would ask him to translate certain words, slowly building a vocabulary. He joined WhatsApp groups that communicated in the language, sought out secular Yiddish-speaking communities and eventually began speaking Yiddish to his own young son.

That journey, not coincidentally, has dovetailed with Landau’s musical career. As the driving force behind Yosl and the Yingels, Landau writes original songs—entirely in Yiddish—that blend jazz and folk melodies with classic klezmer motifs. Their debut EP, Zikhroynes, releases Nov. 15, 2024.

Landau joins the hosts of Culturally Jewish to discuss life in the Yiddish-speaking arts world, from the politics of klezmer retreats to the reaction of non-Jewish audiences across the city of Toronto.

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