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Sephardic songs accompanied life from beginning to end—love and courtship, pregnancy, childbirth, weddings, and mourning. They also marked the yearly cycle with songs rooted in Jewish traditions and historical events.
Ladino, originating from 15th-century Castilian Spanish, was the language of Jews expelled from Spain in 1492. As they dispersed across the Mediterranean, Ladino song absorbed local linguistic and musical influences.
There are two main dialects:
Ladino (Español) – Spoken in Turkey, Greece, Sarajevo, Bulgaria, Rhodes, and beyond.
Haketia – The dialect of northern Morocco.

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From Arboleras vol. 1 - Sephardic cancionero and coplas oral tradition,1996 Here are two consecutive Bulgarian wedding songs, the first describes the beauty of the bridal home and the importance of dancing and celebration, and...
From Arboleras Vol. 2 - Romances Sefardies Tradicion Oral
From Kanta Gayiko, Judeo-Spanish songs from Bulgaria, 2025   This Bulgarian dowry song is an argument between the two future mother in laws. The groom’s mother, in the recurring verse, tells the brides mother that...
From Arboleras vol. 1 - Sephardic cancionero and coplas oral tradition,1996 This Bulgarian dowry song is an argument between the two future mother in laws. That of the groom claims that the bride’s mother is...
From Arboleras Vol. 2 - Romances Sefardies Tradicion Oral
From Ventanas Altas de Saloniki, 2013.
From Decile a mi Amor, Judeo-Spanish songs from Tetuan, 2018.
From Kanta Gayiko, Judeo-Spanish songs from Bulgaria, 2025 This song was traditionally sung to the groom's mother, when she welcomes her new daughter-in-law to at the reception welcoming the bride by her husband's family.
From Ventanas Altas de Saloniki, 2013.
From Arboleras vol. 3, Sephardic songs from the 20th century, 2000
From Ventanas Altas de Saloniki, 2013.
From Merendjenas, Orit Perlman, 2023
From Ventanas Altas de Saloniki, 2013.
From Merendjenas, Orit Perlman, 2023