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Natati La Khayay. " Natati La Khayay " ( Hebrew script: נתתי לה חיי, lit. 'I gave her my life'; the translation used by the band is "She looked me in the eye") is a song performed in Hebrew by the Israeli band Kaveret, conveying both romantic and political message. The song is Israel 's entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1974 which ...
"Hurricane" is a song by Israeli-Russian singer Eden Golan. It was written by Avi Ohayon, Keren Peles, and Stav Beger, and released on 10 March 2024 through Session 42.. Inspired by an Israeli perspective of the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel and its emotional aftermath on Israelis according to Golan and its songwriters, it represented Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024, where it ...
Israel's public broadcaster has requested changes to the lyrics of a song submitted for this year's Eurovision contest. Organisers barred it last week for breaking rules on political neutrality.
Israel has agreed to revise the lyrics of its potential submission to the Eurovision Song Contest after the contest organizers took issue with verses that appeared to reference Hamas' Oct. 7 ...
Songwriter (s) Issachar Miron, Julius Grossman, Spencer Ross, Gordon Jenkins. " Tzena, Tzena, Tzena " ( Hebrew: צאנה צאנה צאנה, "Come Out, Come Out, Come Out"), sometimes " Tzena, Tzena ", is a song, written in 1941 in Hebrew. Its music is by Issachar Miron (a.k.a. Stefan Michrovsky), a Polish emigrant in what was then the British ...
Eurovision Song Contest organisers are scrutinising the Israeli submission after lyrics leaked to the media appeared to refer to the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas that triggered the Gaza war. Eurovision ...
Subliminal was born in Tel Aviv, Israel to a Persian Jewish mother and Tunisian Jewish father from Gafsa. Subliminal started performing music at age 12, and at age 15 he met Yoav "HaTzel" Eliasi. The two quickly became friends as a result of their mutual love of hip-hop . In 1995 the two began performing in Israeli clubs geared toward a hip-hop ...
A U.N. fact-finding team found “reasonable grounds” to believe that some of those who stormed southern Israel on Oct. 7 had committed sexual violence, including rape and gang rape.