|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ethno-Jazz Music by Israel's Acclaimed Shem-Tov Levi Ensemble - P2/2 (In Hebrew)
|
|
|
|
|
Today’s
Enlightening Entertainment
will be presented in
Hebrew and English,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Hebrew, Indonesian,
Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Malay,
Mongolian, Persian,
Portuguese, Russian,
Spanish and Thai.
Welcome artistic viewers
to part 2 of our two-part program
featuring the acclaimed
Shem Tov Levi Ensemble
from Israel.
Founded by the
renowned Shem Tov Levi,
the band has been
performing its unique
ethno-jazz music
since 2003 to the
delight of audiences
around the globe.
Considered
a cultural icon in Israel,
Shem Tov Levi is an
award-winning musician
and composer who is
known for producing
many songs
over the decades which
have been become
beloved classics
in the country.
I will praise you,
God of all souls
And I will thank you
with great fear and awe.
As I stand
in your congregation,
Stronghold to be praised
To you I will
bend the knee and
bow head and body
The high heavens -
Has He not stretched them
forth with His speech?
And He founded the earth
upon nothingness
Can a man discover
the secret of his Creator,
And who He is,
with great fear and awe?
He is praised by
every mouth and tongue
He who did wonders and
did everything wisely
He will be made great
with the holy, high people
May His great name be
sanctified in His world.
He will be made great
with the holy, high people
May His great name be
sanctified in His world.
I was raised
as a flute player, this is
the first thing that I get to
start to make music, and
I studied flute with Israeli
philharmonic players,
very good players,
and then I start also
piano to write music and
started at the Academy,
and later I started to sing.
I don’t think
I’m a great singer but I
just sing… my songs,
songs that I feel that
I can give something
from my soul.
Like the music that
we chose for the albums,
it’s from a lot of places
all over the world.
First of all
Israel is a country,
a young country,
60 years old,
62 to be exact, and
a lot of Jews came from
all over the world,
from India, from….
I think in Japan, there’s
also big community
of Jewish people.
From Arab countries,
from East Europe,
from West Europe,
and along the years,
for almost 2,000 years,
when Israel people
went to other places
than Israel
before they came back,
so they were influenced
by music from Spain,
from wherever
they lived it, so there’s
a lot of Jewish traditions
musically, not one.
You know,
there’s one tradition that
came from East Europe
and one tradition that
came from Spain,
another tradition
from Morocco,
another tradition where
my father came from,
Syria, from Iraq, from
lots of different places.
And also
the instrumentation is…
the contra bass is from
a western instrument.
The flute, you can say
it’s western but also
a lot of flutes that
Shem Tov is using
are like ethnic flutes.
The percussion is more
Arabic oriented, hence
the frame drumming and
darbukas, and sometimes
even play on Kahon,
which Kahon,
it’s Spanish for flamenco
instrument originally,
and the name is
actually a box,
it’s a wooden box.
The oud, of course,
is an Arabic instrument,
I think it originated
in Persia, and it’s a
very ancient instrument.
We are examining
all the time how it will
sound together.
And it doesn’t matter
for a musician what
instrument he’s playing,
if it’s his voice or flute or
piano or something else.
It depends
how he is doing and how
he gives to the people.
So I always tried to
think about this
and what instrument
is the best for doing it,
sometimes it’s the piano,
sometimes it’s the flute,
sometimes it’s the song,
sometimes
it’s one of my friends give
the bass player to play
or the oud player.
The music is
the important,
not the instrument;
the instrument is just
an instrument.
If you go to a synagogue
in Israel, if you go to
a synagogue that people
came from Yemen,
you will hear
different melodies,
different texture,
different harmonies.
And if you go to Ashkenaz,
which is an East
European synagogue,
you will hear
totally different.
So part of the the musical
melting pot in Israel
is that we came from
different influences
from home.
As a kid, I remember
I used to play with
the family after eating
and having fun together,
we used to circle with
chairs and singing for
almost two, three hours,
and I used to play
darbuka with them
as a kid.
Another guy remembers
different,
two of the members
over here are originally,
their parents come from
Morocco or
the grandparents
came from Morocco, it’s
totally different music.
It’s African Moroccan,
mixed with Andalusia
Spanish music, and Noaam,
the percussion player,
his parents are from Iraq,
and Shem Tov
is Bulgarian, his parents
is Israeli like me,
we call it Sabahr, but
we were born in Israel.
But our parents or
grandparents came from
different places.
And so
different influences
make it very versatile,
not one sound.
That’s probably
the reason that the music
sounds very different,
each piece sounds
different from the other.
Dark window
and closed shutters
Come back to your home
High midnight moon
Light on tree branches
Let your soul hear
Little singer
Look up to the firmament
Dawn breaks
and lightens the sky
One bird has been
awakened
Come back to your home
We are good friends
altogether,
and a mixture of us,
the gentleman approach
to each other,
it’s number one special.
Number two is we have
a genius named
Shem Tov Levi,
a lot of pieces are written
by Shem Tov.
His music is already
Israeli traditional music
because it’s like
everybody almost
in Israel knows a lot of
songs that we sang today.
And he also wrote a lot of
film scoring for famous
TV series and movies
and he’s a genius.
So he writes
beautiful music, and also
has a very delicate taste,
he doesn’t like
aggressiveness; he likes
more gentle ways
of approaching
the audience and
the audience’s ears.
I think this is the magic,
if you are looking for
a secret, the secret is
to be really delicate.
Let us conclude
today’s show with
a moving performance
of the elegant score
by Shem Tov Levi
for the 2000 film,
“Circle of Dreams,”
in which he received
the Israeli Film
Academy Award for
his music composition.
We thank you, Shem
Tov Levi Ensemble,
for bringing harmony
to the world through
your God-given talents.
May your beautiful
melodies continue to
offer many joyful
moments to music lovers
everywhere.
For more about Shem
Tov Levi ensemble,
please visit:
Elegant viewers,
thank you for joining us
for today’s
Enlightening Entertainment.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television
for Words of Wisdom,
up next
after Noteworthy News.
Let us always be grateful
for Heaven’s
infinite blessings.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Subtitle
|
|
Arabic , Aulac , Bulgarian , Chinese , Croatian , Czech-Slovak , Dari , Dutch , English , French , German , Gujarati , Hebrew , Hindi , Hungarian , Indonesian , Italian , Japanese , Korean , Malay , Mongol , Mongolian , Persian , Polish , Portuguese , Punjabi , Romanian , Russian , Sinhalese , Slovenian , Spanish , Thai , Turkish , Urdu , Zulu ,
Bulgarian ,
Croatian ,
Dutch , Estonian , Greek , Gujarati ,
Indonesian ,
Mongolian , Nepalese ,
Norwegian , Polish , Punjabi ,
Sinhalese ,
Swedish , Slovenian , Tagalog , Tamil , Zulu
|
|
Scrolls Download |
|
MP3 Download |
|
|
|
|
MP4 download for iPhone(iPod ) |
|
|
Download Non Subtitle Videos
|
|
|
Download by Program
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Date
|
Sun |
Mon |
Tue |
Wed |
Thu |
Fri |
Sat |
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
|
|
|
|