Want to hear the full versions of the songs featured? We made them into a playlist for you: Spotify: spoti.fi/2MWOeJv RUclips: bit.ly/3b2gGl3 RUclips Music: bit.ly/3dbFCJv
Thank you! 🤩 The Mizrahi culture has brought to Israel beautiful music and an intense love and feelings of protection for Israel ❤ that the Ashkenazi culture had begun to lose due to the bad influence from the U.S. radicals. Mizrahis are to be thanked a million times!
@@marcelofrmo : Tudo bem obrigado. 😊 Para falar serio, Os Sefarditas Portugueses fazem parte dos Mizrahis. Mas todos os Mizrahis não fazem parte dos Sefarditas.
@@marcelofrmo : I'm French of Portuguese Sefardi Jewish background. But I prefer to use Israelite instead of Jew. Because Jew is linked to Judea only. Israelite is linked to the whole Israel.
Sarit Hadad, Omer Adam, Yafa Yarkoni are all of Mountain Jewish(Kavkazi) descent. Their ancestors lived in Russia(Dagestan) and Azerbaijan. Mountain Jews(Kavkazim) lived in coexistence with local Muslims for centuries. Mountain Jews are direct descendants of Persian Jews who maintained a Judeo-Persian language.
Mizrahi music is Not an Arab music. Arab music is one of its inspiration. It's a mixture of Arab music, Turkish music, Jewish music, Latin music, Greek music, and even American and classical music.
Turkish music is very strongly influenced by Kurdish music. The most famous singers in Turkey are Kurds: Ibrahim Tatlises, Mahsun Kirmizigül, Hülya Afshar, Özcan Deniz,etc. Their songs are mostly Kurdish folklore and they have translated them into Turkish because the Kurdish language was banned in Turkey until the 1990s.
Hi I started watching videos from your RUclips channel and I'm found Israeli history and culture very interesting and I learned many things I didn't know about Israeli keep up the good work guys
Everything in israel mainstream is mizrahi - the food, the music, the Mediterranean lifestyle, sheeshah and arak, all of it. I'm still waiting for a mizrahi supermodel or actress to break into the west in the manner of such ashkanezim as bar refaeli and gal gadot
@@petarjovanovic1481 How is that bad??? Arabic is a beautiful language and was used to recover Modern Hebrew with Modern Arabic also unity is needed for peace between people and not to mention the history
My favorite Mizrahi pop artist is Eden Ben Zaken! I love her music so much! I especially listen to her song 'Alabina' a lot. Mizrahi music is so amazing and addictive!
@gulyascredo You might like our new French channel: www.youtube.com/@ondeballe New videos coming every week - make sure to subscribe, and let us know if you'd like to help spread the word!
@@UNPACKED as I realised it’s only about a girl ordering coffee ☕️ 😂 but it’s super catchy tho, I’m learning Hebrew so it helps a lot. Akhshav, my most played on Spotify is Uzi Hitman Ani Noladeti
@@fahmiizzuddinhalim5273 it's about a lot more than a girl getting coffee.... It's about a girl offering a date to go home to her apartment on derech hashalom and to her room to have sex
@@fahmiizzuddinhalim5273 hahahah - here are the lyrics. Derech Hashalom Versions: #1#2#3 Tel Aviv in time before midnight, The wind is refusing to blow And the moisture in the air is choking me, at coffeshop local they aren't still turn off the lights she sit alone on an old chair i'm not sure what i want to say her if better for me come to her or to run away her wind come from the sea , she wink to me , she invite me to sit near her her she order for both of us two cappuccino , But the only thing she does is just to complain about the heat of the coffee what hot ... she ask me if i want to leave the coffe shop and she lives in a rented apartment very close to street "the way of peace" \ derehe ashalom lets ask the bill ,this night we wil not go to sleep Tel Aviv in time before midnight, we are go up the stairs she out the key and she open the door and i see a little table and two armchairs and she ask me what i want to drink i feel so like a character from a movie there are two cups on the table and she pour without to stop and she makes me drunk she open one more new a white wine she wink to me and she slowly enter to my heart she order for both of us two cappuccino , But the only thing she does is just to complain about the heat of the coffee what hot ... she ask me if i want to leave the coffe shop and she lives in a rented apartment very close to street "the way of peace" \ derehe ashalom with all what that happen with us you open the air conditioner because we are feel hot maybe i will go to the room and she say me if you want you can stay here to sleep and i say her no way that i go to sleep now this night we are gonna to celebrate lyricstranslate.com
I'm surprised that there is no mention here of Tipex and Kobi Oz. They have bridged cultures for decades while making lots of fun (in a good way) of Ashkenazi and Mizrahi culture and music. They have for decades made great music that has been a fusion and told stories about the cultures they've grown up in. In the 90s they played everywhere: community center playgrounds in small town and clubs in Tel Aviv.
Thank you unpacked for this video and others. Please, note people watching this video, that although many people in Israel and even the states identify with the term Mizrachi many do not. Growing up as a persian jew in Los Angeles I didn't really encounter many people using this term to self identify although there are some who do. It's not really a name that our people gave themselves. It was a label given to us by the non sephardic jews in Israel that was kind of othering that now is accepted as something to identify with an be proud of by many. I'm not mad that some people identify as Mizrachi and to me it's almost like being called middle eastern which is no big deal. I just want to point out that not everyone from MENA countries self identifies as such. Even those people whose parents didn't come from Sepharad. French Morrocan Sephardic Rabbi of the Sephardic Education Center in LA and Jerusalem Daniel Bouskila has lectured on this topic and a good summation of this point of view can be found in this video on Sephardic and Mizrachi identity that he and others were apart of. He speaks at about 12 and a half minutes in. Tamar Zaken also touches on this topic. Shalom. ruclips.net/video/wPSi0QVtiRA/видео.html
This is a great video and I'm happy to see Mizrahi Jews have more representation in the culture and I hope that Mizrahim will have full representation politically as well and that all peoples living in the land will be treated as complete equals. I have only one criticism of this video: Ashkenazim don't have "roots" in Europe. Jews, ethnically cleansed to various places all over the world over millennia, still have roots in the Levant in Southwest Asia/the Middle East and simply have experiences elsewhere. Ashkenazi culture is simply a creolized version of the root core which is from historic Judea that was filtered through the environments of our host nations. When we returned, we began to slowly shed the diaspora influence. Anyways, much love to my Mizrahi brothers and sisters and I wish them the best, both now and the future! B'ezrat Hashem
i never knew anything about okra haza background. i just loved it when i wa kid. just recently through her i started looking at modern mizrahi music and i blast it all the time in my car.
AWESOME! I was introduced to Jewish-sounding music from a Messianic group called, "Israel's Hope." Their CD is 30 years old, and I still listen to it, whenever I can.
I appreciate this interesting but fitting development. Truth be told, when I listen to Israeli music, it usually ends up coming form the Mizrahi field. But Israeli music is sooo diverse, no less.
mizrahi music was never considered niche.it was always popular among israelis. mizrahi music did went thru a big change and today, modern mizrahi sounds completly different than old mizrahi. most modern mizrahi songs sound very western, while most old mizrahi songs sound arabic in nature. that is because mizrahi jews came from the middle eastern countries, aka, arab countries. and modern israel is a very diverse place, with the majority of jews being ashkenazi, so mizrahi being a very popular music genre, did a change and went to a more western style with time. edit: old mizrahi examples: * elinor - zohar argov * haperach begani (the flower in my garden) - zohar argov * pnei malach (face of an angel) - yoav itzhak modern mizrahi examples: * kuku riku - omer adam & eden ben zaken * rak banot (only girls) - itai levi & stephane legar * sucariot kofzon (jumping candy) - eyal golan edit 2: omer adam is a nationaly known singer. A-WA tho, never heared of her.
Israeli culture was never dominated by Ashkenazi singers. Yemenites (Shoshana Damari, Ofra Haza, Margalit Tsanani, Yizhar Cohen...) have always been well represented. You could, perhaps, say that their song weren't Mizrahi, but this word doesn't really mean that much.
Idan Raichel the KING OF ISRAELI Music is Ashkenazi , Miri Ben Ari is Ashkenazi and Daliah Lavi is Ashkenazi (her parents fled antisemitism in Russia and Germany)
@@vikmixedandproudconservati2095 look, I know many singers. If I haven't heard of neither of them, they're not famous. You could've literally said Hava Alberstein and Yardena Arazi. It would make much more sense.
@@tFighterPilot But at least you know Idan Raichel and Yardena Arazi too , but come on Achi , really ?! What about Naomi Shemer , her song YERUSHALAYIM SHEL ZAHAV, what about her . It doesnt matter Ashkenazim , sephardics , Mizrahi We are Am Achad.
Two things promoted this beautiful change: 1. Miri Reguev, former Minister of Culture made Israeli music radio stations play Mizrahi music too 2. Gay party line Arisa made the connection between pop music and Mizrahi music hip from the early 2000s introduced popular crossovers. Sarit Hadad teamed up with DJ Offer Nissim, Arisa teamed up with Margol to produce "Eropa" and from there it continued to Omer Adam ("Tel aviv ya habibi Tel Aviv") and Static & Ben El.
Sarit Hadad, Omer Adam, Yafa Yarkoni are all of Mountain Jewish(Kavkazi) descent. Their ancestors lived in Russia(Dagestan) and Azerbaijan. Mountain Jews(Kavkazim) lived in coexistence with local Muslims for centuries. Mountain Jews are direct descendants of Persian Jews who maintained a Judeo-Persian language.
Mizrahi music remember me a little group of 4 Monit sherut drivers in meeting, listening some Mizrahi song so loud, all with a bad faces, at front of Tachana Merkazit of Beer Sheva, all smoking a strongest cigarette ever, hottest sun of year, you alone approach to ask a price of ride, ALL stop at same time and began look you deep in the eye... then i have began stutter all words in my poor hebrew/english. PS: true story lmao, love this type of music! Greeting from Brazil le kulam Israeli achim!
By the end of this century, Israel will be majority Mizrahi Jewish in population and culture. Which only makes sense as the original Jews were Mizrahi.
Nice that you mentioned cassette tapes. But, why didn't you mention the tapes were often sold (bootleg) at Tel Aviv's central bus station? That is how that name got attached to Mitzrachi music. Also, Reshet Gimel often plays Mitzrachi music, although not as much now that Avner Naim (who is Kurdi) is no longer a disc jockey there.
It is about time the original inhabitants of Israel are having there own kinds of promotions, commercials, ads, advertisements, infomercials, tv spots, teasers, trailers, platformings, and stations
It's interesting how Dana International (who is from Yemen) was left out, since she also made an impact after winning Eurovision, her early songs are totally influenced by Mitzrahi music (she worked with Ofer Nisim).
and that is the surface of a much more bigger tension between Ashkenazi and Sfaradi Jews, which is very unfortunate, like we don't have enough problems to deal with.
@@yo7anan culturally. now were all culturally mizrahi the music the curse words the values, even when we hit on a girl its the mizrahi speaking. And of course when we drive its all mizrahi.
@@shadowbadgercat And im Russian but one that does karaoke in Mizrahit like that song half Russian half Moroccan by Yossef Shitrit. The things 3 years in the IDF could do to you.
@Z S I mean that it doesn't matter that you came from europe or other place the mizrahi culture became imbedded in israeli culture so much that it had became interchangeable from being an israeli. It was inevitble it will happen as israel is in the middle east. So when people that don't know anything about israel call it a white ethno american,europian state i lol cause the image that comes to mind isn't cringe american or europian jews. But the israeli that became imbeded in eastren culture. Even sephardic jews that lived in the middle east for hundreds of years i don't see any diffrence between it mizrahi or israeli culture.
It just makes more sense for music to sound middle eastern for a middle eastern country. I have ashkenazi blood but still dont like ashkenazi music as much as mizrachi. Yaffa Ensemble has music in Ladino which is beutiful to listen to.
Fantastic documentary. However, I wish you would have covered Aris San, without whose guitar style we wouldn't have mizrahi music as we know it, nor did you get into Musica Dikaon, which is my favorite(btw I'm ashkenazi who loves mizrahi culture and believe that Ohev Lichiot by Ofer Levi is one of the best albums of all times in any genre). Much love, and thank you so much for covering Tzion.
I disagree 100%. Our accent is fine the way it is. BTW: the Yemenite accent could never have remained as the mainstream as it was never mainstream and it still is not.
The current accent is pretty much not Ashkenazi in the slightest, the Yemenite accent in of itself was different than the mainstream Mizrahi and Sephardi accents
We disagree. Static and Ben El incorporate many Mizrahi elements in their singing and music: for example their song Silsulim, and encapsulates exactly what we're saying - Mizrahi music has "taken over" Israeli pop. Just like you can barely hear an American pop song now without rap, hip hop, or R&B elements, it's hard to find an Israeli pop song without some Mizrahi elements.
@@eladcohen1399 ממש לא. ספרדים זה קטגוריה נפרדת. רק מי שמדבר לדינו הוא ספרדי. הספרדים הם בכלל טורקים, בולגרים או דורות בארץ. מזרחים זה מי שהגיע מצפון אפריקה, הסהר הפורה ואיראן.
@@Jewish_Israeli_Zionist בשפה היומיומית ספרדים משמש לפעמים כדי לייצג את כל העדות שהזכרת והרבה פעמים יש חפיפה בין המושגים. זה שזה לא תמיד ככ מדוייק זה גם נכון. דרך אגב גם להגיד שיהודים מצפון אפריקה הם מזרחיים זה לא מדוייק, כי גיאוגרפית הם מערביים (והיסטורית גם הרבה מיהודי ספרד הגיעו לצפון אפריקה, בייחוד למרוקו)
If you grew up in the late 80s early 90s you'd know Zohar Argov, Haim Moshe, Boaz Sharabi, Ishay Levi , Avihu Medina and others not mentioned in this video. The 80s singers really pulled at your heart strings unlike anything else. Late 90s and early 2000s Eyal Golan and Sarit Hadad were the most popular, then came Moshe Peretz in the late 2000s, and then an explosion of mediocre acts in the 2010s, which is fun but mostly forgettable electro pop. Haven't listened to that much Omer Adam at all but the little I did doesn't remind me of any of the music I listened to when I was younger.
I have to say many Ashkenazi Israelis still consider this style of music very low-class and roll their eyes when they hear it. For many people it's strongly associated with the scummy, good-for-nothing elements of society, even if it's objectively pleasant music. Except Ofra Haza. Everybody likes her.
I see a similarity with Italy, where Northerners roll their eyes when they hear Neapolitan pop music at its lower terms (the so called "neomelodici"), which is often associated with scummy elements of society.
"America and Europe", finally an Anglo-Saxon medium mentions America for what it is, a continent. P.S.: In 2018 I was walking home from work listening to "Shnei Meshugaim" by Omer Adam, it is one of my favorite songs. Greetings from the American continent, more specifically, the southern Chile...
I love Mizrahi music!!! So much better than a lot of earlier Ashkenazi stuff (except the more poetry-based folky work). There is such a range of it - from specifically Israeli pop to hip hop, folk-infused modern interpretation and jazz. Check it all out!
Geez I’m a kiwi, living in Australia watching a video about Jewish pop music making a comeback in Israel, no idea what they’re saying ...but, you know...RUclips!!
Sarit Hadad, Omer Adam, Yafa Yarkoni are all of Mountain Jewish(Kavkazi) descent. Their ancestors lived in Russia(Dagestan) and Azerbaijan. Mountain Jews(Kavkazim) lived in coexistence with local Muslims for centuries. Mountain Jews are direct descendants of Persian Jews who maintained a Judeo-Persian language.
It's a crime not to include the "Queen of Hebrew Music", also known as "The First lady of Israeli song", Shoshana Damari! She was coming from Yemenite Jewish background, and one of the first Israeli musicians who performed in many countries. She was known for her husky voice and Yemenite Hebrew pronunciation.
Want to hear the full versions of the songs featured? We made them into a playlist for you:
Spotify: spoti.fi/2MWOeJv
RUclips: bit.ly/3b2gGl3
RUclips Music: bit.ly/3dbFCJv
thank you, i love these songs!!!
@@fahmiizzuddinhalim5273 no
Thank you! 🤩 The Mizrahi culture has brought to Israel beautiful music and an intense love and feelings of protection for Israel ❤ that the Ashkenazi culture had begun to lose due to the bad influence from the U.S. radicals. Mizrahis are to be thanked a million times!
As a Hebrew learner, Mizhari is such an addictive genre.
Marcelo Moura :
Ola tudo bem?
Are you Portuguese or Brazilian?😊
Did you know, Portuguese Jews belong to the Mizrahi family?
@@invisibleface6479Tudo bem e você? I’m Brazilian. Actually, I thought Portuguese Jews were Sephardic.
@@marcelofrmo :
Tudo bem obrigado. 😊
Para falar serio,
Os Sefarditas Portugueses fazem parte dos Mizrahis.
Mas todos os Mizrahis não fazem parte dos Sefarditas.
@@marcelofrmo :
I'm French of Portuguese Sefardi Jewish background.
But I prefer to use Israelite instead of Jew.
Because Jew is linked to Judea only.
Israelite is linked to the whole Israel.
@@invisibleface6479 Essa informação eu não tinha! Você é brasileiro ou português, por acaso?
Yemenites take the cake when it comes to vocals!
and Kavkazim- Omer Adam, Sarit Hadad, and Yaffa Yarkoni
Surely. The most authentic form of Judaism too.
Mizrachi > Ashkenazi
@@arisevanyan533 and the most ancient from of Hebrew other than Samaritan Hebrew.
Dan K :
Logical Yemenite Jews are gifted🤩
Sarit Hadad, Omer Adam, Yafa Yarkoni are all of Mountain Jewish(Kavkazi) descent. Their ancestors lived in Russia(Dagestan) and Azerbaijan. Mountain Jews(Kavkazim) lived in coexistence with local Muslims for centuries. Mountain Jews are direct descendants of Persian Jews who maintained a Judeo-Persian language.
That is really cool
Betsy Boomstein :
Mountain Jews are linked to Iranian Jews.
@@invisibleface6479 Correct, Iran used to be known as Persia.
@@darlinspaces :
I know!
Persian empire until 1979 !
I'm watching an Indian drama about war between India and Persia
Veryyy interesting 😊
@@invisibleface6479 which one???
Mizrahi music is Not an Arab music. Arab music is one of its inspiration. It's a mixture of Arab music, Turkish music, Jewish music, Latin music, Greek music, and even American and classical music.
In short it is non European white
Not Ashkenazi fake Hebrew music. Got it, thanks bro!
Turkish music is very strongly influenced by Kurdish music. The most famous singers in Turkey are Kurds: Ibrahim Tatlises, Mahsun Kirmizigül, Hülya Afshar, Özcan Deniz,etc.
Their songs are mostly Kurdish folklore and they have translated them into Turkish because the Kurdish language was banned in Turkey until the 1990s.
@@ma_so_705ibrahim tatlises is half arab and he sings arabesque
@@ma_so_705its not turkish or kurd, its arabesque aka from arab Music style
Grew up listening to Ofra Haza and Kaveret as a kid in the US.
Me too. In Israel :)
@@גליתאנגור-ש1צ זה טוב, כי עכשיו אני גר בארץ חחח
@@GaviLazan אה..חח.. יפה 😉
How the hell does that happen?
@@guyeshel9316 how does what happen?
As an Israel educator, these videos are amazing. Thank you.
Hi I started watching videos from your RUclips channel and I'm found Israeli history and culture very interesting and I learned many things I didn't know about Israeli keep up the good work guys
Thnx. The media always focuses the conflict. It never shows the beautiful aspects of Israel - it has many of them and they are absolutely stunning.
Why do you have flag of rio grande de sul are you gaucho??
Everything in israel mainstream is mizrahi - the food, the music, the Mediterranean lifestyle, sheeshah and arak, all of it. I'm still waiting for a mizrahi supermodel or actress to break into the west in the manner of such ashkanezim as bar refaeli and gal gadot
@Ploni Almoni lmao
@@petarjovanovic1481 mizrachi is like 60% of the jewish population, not 21%
@@petarjovanovic1481 and what do you mean they're ignored? they're most of the country!
@@petarjovanovic1481 If they're not Jews, they're not Mizrahi, they're just Arabs. It's the same reason you don't call ethnic Germans Ashkenazi.
@@petarjovanovic1481 How is that bad??? Arabic is a beautiful language and was used to recover Modern Hebrew with Modern Arabic also unity is needed for peace between people and not to mention the history
My favorite Mizrahi pop artist is Eden Ben Zaken! I love her music so much! I especially listen to her song 'Alabina' a lot. Mizrahi music is so amazing and addictive!
That's a cover from another Jew singer (Ishtar, as front singer of the band Alabina)
@@shamsqasr6173 Wow, I didn't know that. I'll have to listen to the original! Still love Eden Ben Zaken, though, of course🥰
Eden also covered Zehava Ben's song too.
It was amazing.
I absolutely LOVE mizrahi music. My favorite is Eyal Golan. But I listen to all of the ones that appeared in this video.
Mizrahi music used to be sad but now it's very energetic
Those "dikaon" style songs were a staple in the 90s, but most of the earlier songs from the 50s-80s weren't such downers.
Ashkenazis have higher IQ
As Chinese French who's fascinated with Jewish history and lived in Haifa, I got so emotional watching this video.
Why are you emotionally invested in another culture?
@gulyascredo You might like our new French channel: www.youtube.com/@ondeballe New videos coming every week - make sure to subscribe, and let us know if you'd like to help spread the word!
Great to learn about the evolution and the increased diversity of Israel's music scene!
I was just looking for a video on this topic the other day. Thank you for posting this :)
Glad we could help! Did you check out the playlist we made?
Currently, I’m obsessed with Peer Tasi Derech HaShalom 😆
When that came out, you couldn't escape it! It was EVERYWHERE!
@@UNPACKED as I realised it’s only about a girl ordering coffee ☕️ 😂 but it’s super catchy tho, I’m learning Hebrew so it helps a lot. Akhshav, my most played on Spotify is Uzi Hitman Ani Noladeti
@@fahmiizzuddinhalim5273 it's about a lot more than a girl getting coffee.... It's about a girl offering a date to go home to her apartment on derech hashalom and to her room to have sex
@@sharondanya im gaggggeddddd aaahhhhh hahahahhaha now i cant listen to this song same ever again haha
@@fahmiizzuddinhalim5273 hahahah - here are the lyrics.
Derech Hashalom
Versions: #1#2#3
Tel Aviv in time before midnight,
The wind is refusing to blow
And the moisture in the air is choking me,
at coffeshop local they aren't still turn off the lights
she sit alone on an old chair
i'm not sure what i want to say her
if better for me come to her or to run away her
wind come from the sea ,
she wink to me , she invite me to sit near her her
she order for both of us two cappuccino ,
But the only thing she does is just to complain about the heat of the coffee
what hot ... she ask me if i want to leave the coffe shop
and she lives in a rented apartment
very close to street "the way of peace" \ derehe ashalom
lets ask the bill ,this night we wil not go to sleep
Tel Aviv in time before midnight,
we are go up the stairs
she out the key and she open the door
and i see a little table and two armchairs
and she ask me what i want to drink
i feel so like a character from a movie
there are two cups on the table
and she pour without to stop
and she makes me drunk
she open one more new a white wine
she wink to me and she slowly enter to my heart
she order for both of us two cappuccino ,
But the only thing she does is just to complain about the heat of the coffee
what hot ... she ask me if i want to leave the coffe shop
and she lives in a rented apartment
very close to street "the way of peace" \ derehe ashalom
with all what that happen with us
you open the air conditioner because we are feel hot
maybe i will go to the room and she say me
if you want you can stay here to sleep
and i say her no way that i go to sleep now
this night we are gonna to celebrate
lyricstranslate.com
Thank you for doing this video! very well produced
I'm surprised that there is no mention here of Tipex and Kobi Oz. They have bridged cultures for decades while making lots of fun (in a good way) of Ashkenazi and Mizrahi culture and music. They have for decades made great music that has been a fusion and told stories about the cultures they've grown up in. In the 90s they played everywhere: community center playgrounds in small town and clubs in Tel Aviv.
No mention of Ethnix either.
Thank you unpacked for this video and others. Please, note people watching this video, that although many people in Israel and even the states identify with the term Mizrachi many do not. Growing up as a persian jew in Los Angeles I didn't really encounter many people using this term to self identify although there are some who do. It's not really a name that our people gave themselves. It was a label given to us by the non sephardic jews in Israel that was kind of othering that now is accepted as something to identify with an be proud of by many. I'm not mad that some people identify as Mizrachi and to me it's almost like being called middle eastern which is no big deal. I just want to point out that not everyone from MENA countries self identifies as such. Even those people whose parents didn't come from Sepharad. French Morrocan Sephardic Rabbi of the Sephardic Education Center in LA and Jerusalem Daniel Bouskila has lectured on this topic and a good summation of this point of view can be found in this video on Sephardic and Mizrachi identity that he and others were apart of. He speaks at about 12 and a half minutes in. Tamar Zaken also touches on this topic. Shalom. ruclips.net/video/wPSi0QVtiRA/видео.html
One of your best explainers. Brilliantly put together!
Glad you liked it! We made a playlist with all the songs from the video, check it out in the pinned comment.
Ofra Haza was insanely talented
We all ill like what intrigues us culturally. The mizrahi instruments look cool! Technopop just elevates it
This is a great video and I'm happy to see Mizrahi Jews have more representation in the culture and I hope that Mizrahim will have full representation politically as well and that all peoples living in the land will be treated as complete equals.
I have only one criticism of this video: Ashkenazim don't have "roots" in Europe. Jews, ethnically cleansed to various places all over the world over millennia, still have roots in the Levant in Southwest Asia/the Middle East and simply have experiences elsewhere. Ashkenazi culture is simply a creolized version of the root core which is from historic Judea that was filtered through the environments of our host nations. When we returned, we began to slowly shed the diaspora influence.
Anyways, much love to my Mizrahi brothers and sisters and I wish them the best, both now and the future! B'ezrat Hashem
I love Mizrahi music.
i never knew anything about okra haza background. i just loved it when i wa kid. just recently through her i started looking at modern mizrahi music and i blast it all the time in my car.
because Misrahi is very addictive. its similar to Spanish music
thats more sefaradi
AWESOME!
I was introduced to Jewish-sounding music from a Messianic group
called, "Israel's Hope."
Their CD is 30 years old, and I still listen to it, whenever I can.
I'm presently hooked listening to Shefita...her voice, her looks and she is so much fun!
A -Wa I live this band! I did not know they are Jewish sisters! Yay! They Rock!
I appreciate this interesting but fitting development. Truth be told, when I listen to Israeli music, it usually ends up coming form the Mizrahi field. But Israeli music is sooo diverse, no less.
mizrahi music was never considered niche.it was always popular among israelis.
mizrahi music did went thru a big change and today, modern mizrahi sounds completly different than old mizrahi.
most modern mizrahi songs sound very western, while most old mizrahi songs sound arabic in nature.
that is because mizrahi jews came from the middle eastern countries, aka, arab countries. and modern israel is a very diverse place, with the majority of jews being ashkenazi, so mizrahi being a very popular music genre, did a change and went to a more western style with time.
edit:
old mizrahi examples:
* elinor - zohar argov
* haperach begani (the flower in my garden) - zohar argov
* pnei malach (face of an angel) - yoav itzhak
modern mizrahi examples:
* kuku riku - omer adam & eden ben zaken
* rak banot (only girls) - itai levi & stephane legar
* sucariot kofzon (jumping candy) - eyal golan
edit 2: omer adam is a nationaly known singer. A-WA tho, never heared of her.
Israeli culture was never dominated by Ashkenazi singers. Yemenites (Shoshana Damari, Ofra Haza, Margalit Tsanani, Yizhar Cohen...) have always been well represented. You could, perhaps, say that their song weren't Mizrahi, but this word doesn't really mean that much.
Idan Raichel the KING OF ISRAELI Music is Ashkenazi , Miri Ben Ari is Ashkenazi and Daliah Lavi is Ashkenazi (her parents fled antisemitism in Russia and Germany)
@@vikmixedandproudconservati2095 I haven't heard of any of them except Idan Raichel. They're certainly not famous.
@@tFighterPilot
Daliah Lavi is a Legend in Israel and Miri Ben Ari too.
@@vikmixedandproudconservati2095 look, I know many singers. If I haven't heard of neither of them, they're not famous. You could've literally said Hava Alberstein and Yardena Arazi. It would make much more sense.
@@tFighterPilot But at least you know Idan Raichel and Yardena Arazi too , but come on Achi , really ?! What about Naomi Shemer , her song YERUSHALAYIM SHEL ZAHAV, what about her . It doesnt matter Ashkenazim , sephardics , Mizrahi We are Am Achad.
תודה רבה! great video!
Ofra Haza was immortalized by a sample of her appearing in “Pump Up The Volume”.
Well done summary
growing up my fav was Faruouz and ofra. wonderful music
How is Static and Ben El's music mizrahi? Literally each of their songs is a different cultural style.
exactly
YES LIKE WTF
True. We can't forget that the Ashkenazis created Israel. They fought more than what we did.
In the end we are all Jews
Great video!
תודה רבה וכל הכבוד!
I'm wondering if Ishtar Alabina music can be considered mizrahi?
No, it's arabesque. But Ishtar has sung in Hebrew while in Alabina ("Horchat ha-ikaliptus").
Who else listened to that opening song in their teens!?
As an Ashkenazi descendant, more Mizhari culture everywhere please. Much nicer and livelies. Same with the food.
Two things promoted this beautiful change: 1. Miri Reguev, former Minister of Culture made Israeli music radio stations play Mizrahi music too 2. Gay party line Arisa made the connection between pop music and Mizrahi music hip from the early 2000s introduced popular crossovers. Sarit Hadad teamed up with DJ Offer Nissim, Arisa teamed up with Margol to produce "Eropa" and from there it continued to Omer Adam ("Tel aviv ya habibi Tel Aviv") and Static & Ben El.
Sarit Hadad, Omer Adam, Yafa Yarkoni are all of Mountain Jewish(Kavkazi) descent. Their ancestors lived in Russia(Dagestan) and Azerbaijan. Mountain Jews(Kavkazim) lived in coexistence with local Muslims for centuries. Mountain Jews are direct descendants of Persian Jews who maintained a Judeo-Persian language.
Dana International also collaborated with Ofer Nisim and early songs were heavily Mizrahit...
Tel Aviv is a really good song but the message and some of the lyrics are horrible.
Mizrahi music remember me a little group of 4 Monit sherut drivers in meeting, listening some Mizrahi song so loud, all with a bad faces, at front of Tachana Merkazit of Beer Sheva, all smoking a strongest cigarette ever, hottest sun of year, you alone approach to ask a price of ride, ALL stop at same time and began look you deep in the eye... then i have began stutter all words in my poor hebrew/english.
PS: true story lmao, love this type of music! Greeting from Brazil le kulam Israeli achim!
Im dominican and I love the revivo project!!!
By the end of this century, Israel will be majority Mizrahi Jewish in population and culture. Which only makes sense as the original Jews were Mizrahi.
Zohar Argov was the best Mizrahi artist singer, Yemen , many are other Yemen Israel really great singers, but Zohar is the one I like the most. R.I.P
Nice that you mentioned cassette tapes. But, why didn't you mention the tapes were often sold (bootleg) at Tel Aviv's central bus station? That is how that name got attached to Mitzrachi music. Also, Reshet Gimel often plays Mitzrachi music, although not as much now that Avner Naim (who is Kurdi) is no longer a disc jockey there.
It is about time the original inhabitants of Israel are having there own kinds of promotions, commercials, ads, advertisements, infomercials, tv spots, teasers, trailers, platformings, and stations
Also Gad Elbaz! Loved by Americans as well!
We tried to cram as many as we could in the video, but there is always going to be a few we "missed" :)
Well, if you think about it, it was only a matter of time until a country in the Middle East would acculturate to the rest of the region.
Beautiful!
It's interesting how Dana International (who is from Yemen) was left out, since she also made an impact after winning Eurovision, her early songs are totally influenced by Mitzrahi music (she worked with Ofer Nisim).
Thanks for the feedback!
How did you make a video about Mizrachi music without mentioning Chaim Moshe?
It’s my first time hearing mizrahi music and it reminds me of Indian music.
5:53 - Ashkenazi are Middle Eastern in origin, not “western.” I like the video though.
That's a hypothetical remote origin, but the documented recent origin is from Europe
@aeskin1 Nothing hypothetical about our Levantine DNA
@@astroo1991 all jews are mid eastern
but the ashks lived in europe in the diaspora
and that is the surface of a much more bigger tension between Ashkenazi and Sfaradi Jews, which is very unfortunate, like we don't have enough problems to deal with.
And Ishtar Alabina??? 🤔 Her parents are from Morocco 🇲🇦 and Egypy 🇪🇬 🎶
Thank you!
It would have been helpful if this video actually explained what makes music “Mizrahi.” After watching this I so don’t really know.
Internationally I would think Ofra Haza is best known as the vocal sample in Coldcut's remix of
remise in not being mentioned.
Coldcut's remix of...? I think you are missing a word.
Also, in the 80s she was definitely known for Chai and Im Ninalu.
She's also the voice of Yocheved in The Prince of Egypt. Many, many American children have heard her flawless voice without even knowing it.
It is Omer Adamov so his diaspora group was in Dagistan- Azarbajan
Few of their videos have Kavkazi diaspora culture (dance and foods)
Ohh yea when they call israel white ethno state but the truth is were all Mizrahi
We're not all Mizrahi. Please don't erase 40-something percent of the Jewish population.
@@yo7anan
culturally. now were all culturally mizrahi the music the curse words the values, even when we hit on a girl its the mizrahi speaking. And of course when we drive its all mizrahi.
I’m no Mizrahi. I’m mostly Ashkenazi, but I love Mizrahi music
@@shadowbadgercat
And im Russian but one that does karaoke in Mizrahit like that song half Russian half Moroccan by Yossef Shitrit. The things 3 years in the IDF could do to you.
@Z S
I mean that it doesn't matter that you came from europe or other place the mizrahi culture became imbedded in israeli culture so much that it had became interchangeable from being an israeli. It was inevitble it will happen as israel is in the middle east. So when people that don't know anything about israel call it a white ethno american,europian state i lol cause the image that comes to mind isn't cringe american or europian jews. But the israeli that became imbeded in eastren culture. Even sephardic jews that lived in the middle east for hundreds of years i don't see any diffrence between it mizrahi or israeli culture.
I love israeli pop
It just makes more sense for music to sound middle eastern for a middle eastern country. I have ashkenazi blood but still dont like ashkenazi music as much as mizrachi. Yaffa Ensemble has music in Ladino which is beutiful to listen to.
Fantastic documentary. However, I wish you would have covered Aris San, without whose guitar style we wouldn't have mizrahi music as we know it, nor did you get into Musica Dikaon, which is my favorite(btw I'm ashkenazi who loves mizrahi culture and believe that Ohev Lichiot by Ofer Levi is one of the best albums of all times in any genre). Much love, and thank you so much for covering Tzion.
I feel like no one really ever came close to that album by ofer levi, even his later music seems completely different.
GREAT CONTENT
I wish the Yemenite accent could have remained as the mainstream accent rather than the heavily European influenced accent.
I disagree 100%. Our accent is fine the way it is. BTW: the Yemenite accent could never have remained as the mainstream as it was never mainstream and it still is not.
@@junaid1you guys fucked up the Resh
The current accent is pretty much not Ashkenazi in the slightest, the Yemenite accent in of itself was different than the mainstream Mizrahi and Sephardi accents
@@kipodarelle9876 yes, that's the most disgusting part of it... And the Chet
@@kipodarelle9876 the resh is ok but the khet is horrible
nice video but it mixes up mizrahi music with mizrahi artists that their music doesn't resemble anything authentic.
Yeah Static and Bebel is not Mizrahi music. I have no idea if the artists are Mizrahi or not.
@@yo7anan todo bum is an israeli version to brazilian funky. But has nothing to do with mizrahi music
We disagree. Static and Ben El incorporate many Mizrahi elements in their singing and music: for example their song Silsulim, and encapsulates exactly what we're saying - Mizrahi music has "taken over" Israeli pop.
Just like you can barely hear an American pop song now without rap, hip hop, or R&B elements, it's hard to find an Israeli pop song without some Mizrahi elements.
I think that the mainstream music in Israel today is a mix of Mizrahi and Ashkenazi. west and east. traditional with modern.
Ashkenazi music isnt represented at all in Israel. When have you heard traditional european sounding music in israel before?
What about Sephardic culture
Sfaradim and mizrahim are often overlapping definitions. Mizrahit music also includes the "sfaradit" culture.
@@eladcohen1399 ממש לא. ספרדים זה קטגוריה נפרדת. רק מי שמדבר לדינו הוא ספרדי. הספרדים הם בכלל טורקים, בולגרים או דורות בארץ. מזרחים זה מי שהגיע מצפון אפריקה, הסהר הפורה ואיראן.
@@Jewish_Israeli_Zionist בשפה היומיומית ספרדים משמש לפעמים כדי לייצג את כל העדות שהזכרת והרבה פעמים יש חפיפה בין המושגים. זה שזה לא תמיד ככ מדוייק זה גם נכון. דרך אגב גם להגיד שיהודים מצפון אפריקה הם מזרחיים זה לא מדוייק,
כי גיאוגרפית הם מערביים (והיסטורית גם הרבה מיהודי ספרד הגיעו לצפון אפריקה, בייחוד למרוקו)
Who is the pop singer on the video?
proud mizrahi
Hope more countries go the path of the UAE with relations with Israel, including my country Malaysia.
Is the unlabeled section of the graph supposed to be labeled "Askenazi?"
LOVE IT
למה לא מוזכר "הברירה הטבעית?
Omer Adam is Kavkazi and Ashkenazi, for those who didn’t know
Kavkazis are not ashkenazi, Sarit hedad is also kavkazi
@@denniswrestling1 that’s exactly why I specifically wrote “and”. His mother is ashkenazi and his father is kavkazi
Thank GOD!!!! Israel represents a gathering of Jewish people from around the WORLD not only Europeans.❤️!
Ashkenazim also have great music like Idan Raichel , Daliah Lavi and Miri Ben Ari .
i like hadassa yeshurun
Bracha Cohen and Zion Golan!
If you grew up in the late 80s early 90s you'd know Zohar Argov, Haim Moshe, Boaz Sharabi, Ishay Levi , Avihu Medina and others not mentioned in this video. The 80s singers really pulled at your heart strings unlike anything else. Late 90s and early 2000s Eyal Golan and Sarit Hadad were the most popular, then came Moshe Peretz in the late 2000s, and then an explosion of mediocre acts in the 2010s, which is fun but mostly forgettable electro pop. Haven't listened to that much Omer Adam at all but the little I did doesn't remind me of any of the music I listened to when I was younger.
It means Israel is becoming more middle eastern... As it should.
Eden BenZaken is the best 😍
Chaim Moshé?
Where is Nasrin Qadri ?
I have to say many Ashkenazi Israelis still consider this style of music very low-class and roll their eyes when they hear it. For many people it's strongly associated with the scummy, good-for-nothing elements of society, even if it's objectively pleasant music.
Except Ofra Haza. Everybody likes her.
That’s because they’re snobs that think too highly of themselves and are dismissive of other cultures.
I see a similarity with Italy, where Northerners roll their eyes when they hear Neapolitan pop music at its lower terms (the so called "neomelodici"), which is often associated with scummy elements of society.
Not really, maybe in some enclaves of rich people from the Tel Aviv region. Where I grew up Mizrahi music was popular among everyone
👏👏👏👏👏💎🌿💎🌿💎🌿💎🏆👍🏆💯💯💯💯🙏🎯🙏🎯🐬🐬🐬🐬🐬🤩💪♥️💥💥💥💥🌅🌅🌅🌅🌅🌅✌️💎🌿♥️
"America and Europe", finally an Anglo-Saxon medium mentions America for what it is, a continent.
P.S.: In 2018 I was walking home from work listening to "Shnei Meshugaim" by Omer Adam, it is one of my favorite songs.
Greetings from the American continent, more specifically, the southern Chile...
Thank you Miri Regev, it's all thanks to you. And... Arisa and Doron Medalie
viva la israel 💙🇮🇱💙
Ashkenazi music is not western though.. That's why it was it's own genre, and the foundation of Broadway but it was distinctively Mediterranean.
you forgot the Moroccan Albino dude - Medinah Medinah,,,
I love Mizrahi music!!! So much better than a lot of earlier Ashkenazi stuff (except the more poetry-based folky work). There is such a range of it - from specifically Israeli pop to hip hop, folk-infused modern interpretation and jazz. Check it all out!
There is always a self hating ashkenaz isn't there.
"Owmer Aadaam" 🤦🏼♂️
Omer adam. Try
Reminds me of greek pop
Geez I’m a kiwi, living in Australia watching a video about Jewish pop music making a comeback in Israel, no idea what they’re saying ...but, you know...RUclips!!
Can't seem to find any venues for listening to Mizrachi music in Tel Aviv or Jerusalme, live or otherwise. Any ideas?
Ironically both people here Omer Adam and Sarit Hadad are actually from Soviet Union(Caucasus)not Arab world.
They came from Muslim countries that were under Soviet rule.
@@גבריאלפאלקאו Very True I am also like this,just mentioning the Irony.
Omer Adam was actually born in the United States of all places!
@@גבריאלפאלקאו Omer Adam is half ashkenazi too, so not all of his family came from those countries
Sarit Hadad, Omer Adam, Yafa Yarkoni are all of Mountain Jewish(Kavkazi) descent. Their ancestors lived in Russia(Dagestan) and Azerbaijan. Mountain Jews(Kavkazim) lived in coexistence with local Muslims for centuries. Mountain Jews are direct descendants of Persian Jews who maintained a Judeo-Persian language.
This video is a total bait-and-switch for the one that RUclips claimed was hate speech.
It's a crime not to include the "Queen of Hebrew Music", also known as "The First lady of Israeli song", Shoshana Damari! She was coming from Yemenite Jewish background, and one of the first Israeli musicians who performed in many countries. She was known for her husky voice and Yemenite Hebrew pronunciation.