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We’ll be drawing the winner randomly on Tuesday early morning.
SHALOM HANOCH YOUTUBE MOVIE
Just answer this question (inspired actually by the movie I saw last night about another rocker, Nowhere Boy) in the comments below before Monday, March 7th at midnight.ĭon’t worry – there’s no right answer.
SHALOM HANOCH YOUTUBE FREE
So listen to Hanoch’s music – below – and then go knock knock knockin’ on the Cedar’s (online) door trying to get tix (buy ’em on the Cedar’s Website for $16 in advance, $21 at the door, with a 20% discount for kids, students, and seniors).īut… because you know TCJewfolk always has the hook up… you can try to win a pair of free tickets here before you pull out your wallet. This musician/composter/arranger/singer is so hip that his most famous concerts happen once-a-month at the hip Tel Aviv Barby Club – they START at 2am and are sold out in advance. Hanoch’s music ranges from pure Rock & Roll to delicate, intimate, acoustic songs, which have always played a major roll in Israeli culture (”Maya”, “Why Should I Take it to Heart”, “Guitar & Violin”, “Dej’a- Vu”). tour and there’s no question that it’s a show not to be missed. Israeli rockstar Shalom Hanoch – think of him as the Israeli Mick Jagger meets the Israeli Neil Young – is coming to Minneapolis’ Cedar Cultural Center on Thursday, March 10th at 7:30 pm as a part of his U.S. As I’m sitting here, writing this piece and listening to the Shalom Hanoch video below, I can’t help but smile. There’s something super cool in listening to hard pounding beats and singing guitar solos with Israeli lyrics.
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Because if you listen to the Beatles channel on Sirius XM as much as I do, unlocking your inner Israeli grandparent won’t be so hard.Win Tickets to Hear Israeli Rockstar Shalom Hanoch in Minneapolis Regardless of if you understand the lyrics or not, there are plenty of excellent Hebrew classic rock tunes worth listening to. It’s art, you know, I don’t think there’s any wrong way to interpret art.” Why limit yourself? If you don’t know the lyrics, I think you can make your own meanings. “It just definitely helps you understand other people’s cultures better. In my quest for more Israeli rock, I came across the blog, “The Diversity of Classic Rock,” run by music historian Angie Weisgal who blogs under the name Angie Moon and runs the Instagram account, Weisgal explains that “if it makes me feel like I’m living in a time that I didn’t really live in,” she knows it’s a track worth recommending.įor her and many fans of “foreign” classic rock, the language doesn’t matter. Every time I unearth one of these albums from a bin labeled “Foreign Rock” or “Middle Eastern,” I feel a sense of pride knowing that there were Jewish musicians that pioneered such a unique sound.
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I am fortunate to live in the heavily Israeli expat population in the San Fernando Valley, so it is possible for me to accidentally come across such delightful albums as Poogy in a Pita - which has the entire band lounging inside of a pita bread as the album art - or a special Record Store Day reissue of Singles Rarities & Oddities by The Churchills. Like most teenagers playing with this retro tech, I looked to my parents for help, and the Hebrew rock records that immigrated to LA with my parents became the basis for my burgeoning record collection. As a teen, when my hipster wannabe self first became aware of the revival of vinyl records, it was because I had been gifted a trendy black and red Crosley record player. Yeladudes (Kiddos) by Einstein was my favorite CD to listen to at bedtime - it’s like listening to a crazy uncle sing absurdist bedtime stories about the land of the dwarves (“Be’Medinat HaGamadim”) and a guy that goes around bending bananas at night (“Mekofef Habananot”).Īs listening technology evolved past CDs and boomboxes, my favorite music bounced from iPods to iPhones, and I soon left the Hebrew albums of my childhood behind. My parents are Israeli and my first language was Hebrew as a kid, I would fall asleep every night listening to Israeli lullabies by Arik Einstein on my red boombox.
SHALOM HANOCH YOUTUBE MAC
But if you are a Jewish classic rock fan, or even just have Fleetwood Mac stuck in your head because of the TikTok algorithm, I implore you to give Israeli rock a chance. The era gave us no shortage of American Jewish musicians to fall in love with - from Lou Reed to Bob Dylan to Mama Cass. As this nostalgia for a time that we did not live through continues, it is becoming increasingly clear that this era’s music continues to capture the fascination of generations.