Louis Waldman born to a family of Jewish
Galician immigrants living on the
Lower East Side of
Manhattan in
New York City. Early on he was recognized as a "wunderkind", officiating at the pulpit with a choir by the age of nine. He studied with local musician Shabtai Weingarten. His
Yiddish name "Leibele" is the diminutive form of
Leib. Waldman was the choir leader in the Wayne Street Synagogue of
Jersey City (1924), the Livonia Street Synagogue of
Brownsville (1925), the
Flatbush Jewish Center (1925–26, with Cantor Samuel Katzman) and in the Galician Synagogue of
Passaic in 1927. In 1928 he assumed his first adult cantorial position, officiating on the
High Holidays at the Beth Israel Synagogue on Columbia Street in Cambridge, Mass. In 1929 Waldman became the cantor of Temple Emanuel of Passaic, where he remained until 1934. Waldman then served one year at the
Mount Eden Jewish Center in the Bronx. At this point in his career, Waldman elected not to accept full-time cantorial positions, instead working on the High Holidays in many prominent venues, including
Hunts Point Palace (1936 and 1937), the
Bronx Winter Garden (1938), the Concord Hotel and
Grossinger's Catskill Resort Hotel in the
Catskill Mountains (New York), Laurel In The Pines in
Lakewood (New Jersey) and The Breakers (New Jersey). In addition to singing in the synagogue, Waldman developed an extensive film career, appearing in a dozen motion pictures, including “The Voice of Israel” where he appeared with world famous cantors
Yossele Rosenblatt,
Mordechai Herschman, and
David Roitman. In addition he began to develop a radio career, singing for over a quarter of a century on the airwaves, appearing on stations WTBS,
WMCA and
WEVD, the station of the Forward Association. During WWII, Waldman sang for Jewish troops stationed all over the United States. The
Smithsonian Institution has preserved recordings of Waldman singing “Ich Dank Dir Gott far America” (I Thank You God for America), and the other was “Venn Di Zihn Vellen Kommen Tzurick” (When Your Son Will Come Back From the War). He also performed for many Jewish organizations, including
Israel Bonds, the
Jewish National Fund (JNF), and the
Anti-Defamation League. Waldman initiated a series of recordings, produced by Moses Asch, and issued on his label, ASCH Records. Waldman later recorded for Stinson, Disc, Banner, and following the second world war, RCA Victor. In the 1950s Waldman recorded for ABC and later for a private label, MALOH Records. During most of these years, he recorded with Oscar Julius as his conductor and Abraham Ellstein as his accompanist. While still a young man, Waldman concertized with the renowned cantor
Zavel Kwartin (in his eighties at the time) and Yossele Rosenblatt. In fact, Rosenblatt shared the stage with Waldman during his final concert in the United States before his death in
Palestine in 1933. Leibele Waldman died on August 28, 1969.
Legacy In the words of Waldman's son Harvey: ==Filmography==