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Shlomo Simcha

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Shlomo Simcha
Background information
BornManchester, United Kingdom
GenresJewish music, Contemporary Jewish religious, Religious Jewish music
Occupation(s)Jewish cantor, Jewish singer
InstrumentVocals
Years active1983–present
LabelsSheya Mendlowitz Productions, Aderet Records, Sameach Music, M & M Enterprises, HASC, Doni Gross Productions
Websitehttps://www.shlomosimcha.com

Shlomo Simcha Sufrin, better known as Shlomo Simcha (Hebrew: שלמה שמחה) is a UK-born Canadian Hasidic Jewish cantor and singer. Shlomo Simcha began his career in a small kollel in Montreal, where he was discovered by a local wedding band leader[1] who brought him onto a project recording a series for children in the Satmar community called Besof Umachol. His work on the series caught the attention of Mendy Werdyger at Aderet Records, who introduced him to producer Sheya Mendlowitz, with whom he would create his first commercial album.[1]

In 1992, Shlomo Simcha found himself flying to Israel to perform on stage with Mordechai Ben David at a concert in Yad Eliyahu, Tel Aviv during the holiday of Sukkot – his first major exposure to audiences and other names in the world of Jewish music. That exposure led to the first of many invitations to perform at the annual A Time for Music benefit concert, in support of the Jewish non-profit agency HASC, and the beginning of his relationship with composer and musical artist Abie Rotenberg, with whom he would create the popular Aish music series.[1]

Since the start of his career, Shlomo Simcha has released seven solo albums and collaborated or been featured on over 20 albums, with artists, arrangers, and composers like Benny Friedman, Nafshenu Orchestra, Yossi Green, Moshe Laufer, Suki Berry / Suki & Ding, Yisroel Lamm (the Neginah Orchestra), and more. He regularly performs at benefit concerts[2] and Jewish community events across North America, the UK and Israel, as well as private and corporate functions.

Personal life

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Shlomo Simcha was born in Manchester, United Kingdom,[2] to Rabbi Mordechai Tzvi and Mrs. Frayda Sufrin.[3] He is a great-grandchild of Rabbi Eliyahu Lopian, and one of 14 children.[3][4] He grew up in the Hampstead Garden Suburb and Temple Fortune neighbourhoods of London[5] where he was influenced by the prayer styles of his own father, as well as Nathan (Bobby) Vogel, and Cantor Herschel Gorman.[5]

Following his family's move to Temple Fortune, Shlomo Simcha became obsessed with professional singing, and sought to join the London School of Jewish Song (a London-based Jewish choir led by composer and musical artist Yigal Calek). While he has said his family would not be able to manage the time commitment necessary for Shlomo to be in the choir, he was allowed to sit in on rehearsals, and he made a point to seat himself at the same table as Yigal Calek at their synagogue's Friday evening services every week.[5]

Career

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In 1989, Shlomo Simcha entered his first professional position as Sexton and Assistant Cantor at the Tifereth Beth David Jerusalem Synagogue in Cote St Luc, Montreal.[1] He remained there until 1993, when he moved to Toronto, Ontario after receiving an offer for the position of Lead Cantor from Shaarei Shomayim Congregation, working alongside Cantor Yaakov Motzen.[6] Shlomo retained that position until 2005, after which he became the Cantor at the Torath Emeth Congregation,[1] a role he held until 2019. During and beyond his time as a cantor, Shlomo Simcha worked to build up his career as a solo and collaborative artist, beginning with his 1993 debut album, That Special Melody, under Aderet Records.[1]

While Shlomo Simcha's career as a solo artist officially began with the release of his first album in 1993, his first experience in studio was singing on the Besof Umachol series for the Satmar community in 1990, recorded at the home studio of the head of the Montreal wedding band. In 1992, Mendy Werdyger of Aderet Records heard the tape while in a store in Williamsburg, Brooklyn and contacted Shlomo Simcha directly to inquire about making an album. During his initial meeting at Aderet in New York, Werdyger introduced Shlomo Simcha to Sheya Mendlowitz, producer of the HASC: A Time for Music series, and informed him that they wanted to record a series of albums together. Soon after, Werdyger's brother, singer Mordechai Ben David, invited Shlomo Simcha to travel with him to Israel to perform at a concert for the holiday of Sukkot, and the two performed together on stage,[7] introducing Shlomo Simcha to Ben David's fan base.[5]

Not long after, Shlomo Simcha would receive the first of what would be many invitations to perform at the annual HASC: A Time for Music benefit concert, where he would eventually meet long-time friend and collaborator Abie Rotenberg, with whom he would go on to create the Aish series.[1] Since the beginning of his career as a recording artist, between solo, collaborative and featured work, Shlomo Simcha has sung on over 40 full-length albums.

Shlomo Simcha moved from Toronto to Boca Raton, Florida in 2021.[8]

Discography

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Solo albums

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Year Album Title Label
1993 That Special Melody Sheya Mendlowitz Productions
1995 Simchas Yom Tov Sheya Mendlowitz Productions
1995 Tehilim Sheya Mendlowitz Productions
1999 Aneini Self-Published
2000 Made in Canada (Released internationally as Siman Tov) Suki & Ding
2001 Shabbos with Shlomo Simcha – Nusach Ashkenaz Aderet Records
2001 Shabbos with Shlomo Simcha – Nusach Sephard Aderet Records
2004 Hamenagen Sameach Music
2006 Miracles Aderet Records
2016 Ani Kan Doni Gross Productions

Aish series

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Year Album Title Label
1997 Aish Volume 1 Aderet Records
2003 Aish Volume 2 Aderet Records
2020 Aish Volume 3 Doni Gross Productions
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[9][10]

Year Artist Album Title Label
1990 Shlomo Itzkowitz Besof Umachol Satmar
1993 HASC A Time for Music VI Sheya Mendlowitz Productions
1993 Various Artists The Bentching Tape Sheya Mendlowitz Productions
1994 Gideon Levine The Best of the Best GYL Productions
1995 Various Artists Solid Gold Volume 1 Solid Gold Music
1996 Suki & Ding Zemiros 2 Suki & Ding Productions
1997 Various Artists Solid Gold Volume 2 Solid Gold Music
1999 Various Artists Solid Gold Volume 3 Solid Gold Music
1999 Yerachmiel Begun & The Miami Boys Choir Yachad – Where the Stars Come Together Yerachmiel Begun & The Miami Boys Choir
2000 Various Artists All-Star Collection Sameach Music
2002 Gideon Levine The Best of the Best 2 GYL Productions
2002 HASC A Time for Music XV: United We Stand Sheya Mendlowitz Productions
2003 Various Artists Sameach at the Wheel Sameach Music
2004 Various Artists Solid Dance Solid Gold Music
2004 Neshoma Orchestra Neshama Yeseirah – A Heimishe Simcha Sameach Music
2005 HASC A Time for Music XVIII Sheya Mendlowitz Productions
2005 Various Artists Sameach at the Wheel 2 Sameach Music
2006 Suki & Ding All Star Collection Suki & Ding Productions
2006 Various Artists Hallel 2 Gal Paz
2006 Nafshenu Orchestra Chai Lifeline Presents Nafshenu Orchestra Featuring Shlomo Simcha Sheya Mendlowitz Productions
2007 Various Artists Harei Yehudah M&M Enterprises
2011 Nafshenu Orchestra The Wedding of the Century Aaron Appelbaum Productions
2013 Nafshenu Orchestra Fusion
2014 Benny Friedman With All My Soul – Kol Haneshama Sheli Benny's Music
2014 Various Artists The Power of Amein Aaron Teitelbaum Productions
2015 Various Artists The Lost Treasure Shimmy Shtauber
2015 Doni Gross A Kumzitz in the Rain Vol. 2 Doni Gross Productions
2016 Tzvi Silberstein Voice of the Stars – Kol HaKochavim Doni Gross Productions
2016 Pinchas Wolf Shirei Pinchas Volume 1 Nigun Music
2017 Pinchas Wolf Shirei Pinchas Volume 2 MRM
2017 Pinchas Wolf Shirei Pinchas Volume 3 Shiray Pinchas LLC
2017 Doni Gross A Kumzitz in the Rain Vol. 3 (Junior) Doni Gross Productions
2017 Shades of Green Leil Shishi Doni Gross Productions
2017 Chabad with Moshe Laufer Leil Shishi Levik T.
2019 Pinchas Wolf Shirei Pinchas Volume 4 Shiray Pinchas LLC
2019 Doni Gross A Kumzitz in the Rain Vol. 4 (Junior) Doni Gross Productions
2020 Benny Friedman Whispers of the Heart Doni Gross Productions
2022 Journeys Volume 5 Doni Gross Productions

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Ami Magazine Cover Story – The Musical World of Shlomo Simcha (November 1, 2016)
  2. ^ a b Arutz Sheva (Israel National News) – Performer Shlomo Simcha: The Power of Jewish Music and Radio (February 12, 2007)
  3. ^ a b COLLIVE – Rabbi Mordechai Sufrin, 79,OBM (September 14, 2016)
  4. ^ Mishpacha – Jewish Family Weekly – 5 Things You Didn't Know About Shlomo Simcha (June 20, 2018)
  5. ^ a b c d Jewish Music Toronto – Live With the Cantors Episode 12 – Shlomo Simcha (October 30, 2018)
  6. ^ Indianapolis Jewish Post & Opinion – Volume 71, Number 35 (May 18, 2005)
  7. ^ "Shlomo Simcha DEBUT! with MBD Yad Eliyahu 1992". October 26, 2020 – via www.youtube.com.
  8. ^ COLLIVE - 28 Years Later, Shlomo Simcha Sings ‘Machnisei Rachamim’ (September 2, 2021)
  9. ^ – Shlomo Simcha Biography – JewishMusic.fm
  10. ^ "Shlomo Simcha". www.israel-music.com.
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