Alex Jacobowitz


Alex Jacobowitz is a classically trained concert artist and street performer who plays the marimba and xylophone.

New York

During the early 1980s he studied music at the State University of New York at Binghamton, studying marimba privately with Gordon Stout, John Beck and Leigh Howard Stevens. Soon thereafter, he began a busking career in the late 1980's, playing on the streets of New York City, including at Lincoln Center's "Meet the Artist" program, Yeshiva University, Zabar's, Central Park, the 84th Street Synagogue, International House, the New York Hilton, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Coney Island's "Sideshows by the Seashore". From 1984-1989 he was an Official Street Performer at the South Street Seaport in Lower Manhattan, a member of Musicians Under New York, and Young Audiences of Rochester and the Northeast Intermediate Unit #19. He has performed at Arts Councils and Imagination Celebrations throughout New York State. He has performed on Entertainment Tonight, and has been an artist-in-residence at Artpark and Holland Village.

Europe

In 1991, he moved to Europe, mainly performing in Germany, and living in Berlin. Jacobowitz performed classic and Jewish traditional music on German television, and occasionally in Hungary, Israel, Italy, Luxembourg, South Korea, Poland, Portugal, Switzerland, Russia and Ukraine. In 2006, he was invited to perform at the Busker's Festival in Ferrara, Italy. Since 2015 he has been accepted into the Artists' Program of the Central Council of Jews in Germany.

Klezmer

In 1994, he began the study of traditional Jewish instrumental music with Giora Feidman. In 1997, he saw Brave Old World in concert, and trained under Alan Bern, their musical director.
Solo klezmer appearances include festivals in Jerusalem, Schleswig-Holstein, Safed, Kraków, Fürth, Bamberg, synagogues throughout Germany, including Oranienburgerstrasse Synagogue in Berlin, Chabad Houses in Prague, Geneva, Zürich, the Jewish Museum in Frankfurt, Hackescher Hoftheater in Berlin, Kibbutz Nahal Oz, Kibbutz Ma'ale HaChamisha, and settlement Mitzpe Jericho.
He has performed with Shelly Lang's Neshoma Orchestra, the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra'', and the Berlin Kammerphilharmoniker.
He has performed Jewish music at Pisa's Jewish Festival Sydney's Shir Madness festival, the Warsaw Jewish Festival,
the Trondheim Jewish Culture Festival, the Düsseldorf Jewish Film Festival, the Budapest Jewish Film Festival
and the 4th Munich Jüdische Filmtage, the Jewish Cultural Days in Vienna, Jewish Week in Leipzig.
Since 2010 he has been performing klezmer music with violinists Yona Rayko or Mark Kovnatskiy at Jewish cultural festivals throughout Europe.
His book Ein Klassischer Klezmer: Reisegeschichten eines jüdischen Musikers was published in German in 1998, 2000 and 2016.

Awards

He is the recipient of a Meet the Composer award. His Art of Xylos CD was released in 2002 by Sony-BMG under the Arte Nova label, and was nominated for the Echo Prize under the crossover category. He won competitions in Montreal, Lucerne, Ludwigsburg and Osnabrück. In 2016 he was accepted to the Central Council of Jews in Germany's Artist Roster, which provided German government funding for his concerts in Jewish communities there; in August 2017 he was featured in their newspaper, the Jüdische Allgemeine.

Recordings