Jewish music is a broad, diasporic family of musical practices tied together by Jewish religious life, languages, and communal rituals. It encompasses liturgical chant (nusach and cantillation), para-liturgical song (piyyut, nigunim), and a wide spectrum of folk and popular repertoires that grew within Jewish communities across Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia.
Across its branches, Jewish music is characterized by modal systems (from synagogue nusach to Middle Eastern maqam), richly ornamented, melismatic vocal lines, responsorial and communal singing, and repertoire in Hebrew alongside Jewish languages like Yiddish, Ladino (Judeo-Spanish), and Judeo-Arabic. Instrumentation and rhythm reflect local host cultures: klezmer ensembles use clarinet, fiddle, tsimbl/cimbalom, and accordion, while Sephardi and Mizrahi traditions favor oud, qanun, darbuka/riqq, and frame drums. Weddings, life-cycle rituals, Sabbath/holiday services, and storytelling all provide contexts where music functions as a vehicle for memory, devotion, joy, and communal identity.