| The following discussion of In My Heart is taken directly from Richard Silverstein's blog, found at http://www.richardsilverstein.com/tikun_olam/2005/03/post.html |
| To hear the music, click on the image
of David Broza below; it was originally downloaded from
http://sabbah.biz/mt/archives/2005/04/06/israeli-palestinian-peace-song/
See news reports from MSNBC, BBC, and al Jazeera. |
March 24, 2005David Broza & Wisam Murad to Sing for Peace on Israeli & Palestinian Radio
David Broza performing live (Broza.com) CLICK
ON ABOVE PHOTOGRAPH TO HEAR BROZA & MURAD SING
David Broza, an
Israeli pop star and Wisam Murad, founder of the Palestinian contemporary
music ensemble,
Sabreen, will deliver unprecedented performances of a song they
co-wrote, In My Heart (B'Libi--hear
it), on Galey Tzahal,
Israeli Army Radio and Voice of Palestine (Israeli,
Palestinian to sing for peace on air). The broadcast will take place
this Sunday at 10:10 AM Israel time (12:10 AM Pacific Standard Time
(PST)). Click here for the Galey Tzahal
audio stream. Broza
will perform the song in Hebrew on Palestine radio and Murad will perform
the song in Arabic on Israel radio. The NBC Nightly News (video link--beware...MSN Video doesn't play well with others...I couldn't get it to play using Firefox) featured a riveting story on the song on last night's broadcast. MSNBC provides a text version of the story which quotes Murad on the broader implications for peace inherent in the song: "If we love the land, if we believe in history, we can create good future for us." The NBC News clip indicates there is a music video of B'Libi. If any Israeli readers visit here, please help me get a link to the video! Galey Tzahal deserves special praise for embracing the initiative as another Israeli station was first approached to participate and declined. According to Haaretz, Galey Tzahal DJ Razi Barkai presented the station's manager Avi Bnaya with the initiative, and Bnaya approved it. "I agreed to play the song because I believe that in the new general atmosphere that has been created, music and lyrics can connect between hearts and people, mainly young people." In Broza's interview to publicize the performance, he stated that:
Amen to that. David Broza is an interesting figure within the Israeli music scene.
Although born in Israel, he grew up in Spain and absorbed a European
musical sensibilty. When he first crashed the Israeli pop scene in 1979
with the smash hit peace song,
Yihye Tov, (this 1982 version is by Yasmine, an ensemble including my
brother and I), he was a brash young singer who wrote songs that delivered
less than they promised. Yihye Tov's title, tone and melody derived from
Paul Simon's wonderful, An American Tune. The former was an infinitely
simple, touching and slightly syrupy pop song that embraced the values of
the peace movement.
The more I study the lyrics in trying to translate them, the more I
realize the utter simplicty and profundity of them. The style is a bit
like Zelda's (an early 20th century Israeli poet) stripped down language
or perhaps like one of Leonard Cohen's dirges or Samuel Beckett. These
are stark words, full of pain, full of suffering and full of love of
country. Many are calling B'Libi a "peace song." But strictly speaking
this is not so. You will not see the word shalom in the Hebrew
lyrics. That's because the song is not about peace. It is about land,
place, community and nation. The song posits that both peoples are rooted
deeply in their native soils and traditions. It seems to say that once
both sides can acknowledge this then peace will flow from this
understanding. But peace cannot flower where one nation denies the rights
and aspirations of the other. In researching this post, I visited the Sabreen website, which hosted two mp3 files of their work. It is amazingly vital music and thankfully retains much of the traditional instrumentation of Arab music ensembles. Hear In the Silence of the Night. |