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The Idan Raichel Project burst onto the
Israeli music scene in 2002, changing the
face of Israeli popular music and offering a
message of love and tolerance that resonated
strongly in a region of the world where the
headlines are too often dominated by
conflict. With an enchanting blend of
Ethiopian and Middle Eastern flavors coupled
with sophisticated production techniques and
a spectacular live show, the Idan Raichel
Project has become one of the most
unexpected success stories in Israeli music
today. While he regularly fills large
concert halls at home, the upcoming
international release of his recordings on
the Cumbancha record label promises to
introduce the work of this inspirational
collective to a wide global audience.
Idan Raichel, the architect of this unique
recording project, is a 29-year old
keyboardist, producer and composer from Kfar
Saba. Idan was born in 1977 to a family with
Eastern European roots, and although music
was an important part of his upbringing, his
parents did not place much emphasis on
performing music from his particular
cultural background. “I think the fact that
I didn’t have strong family musical roots is
what made me be very open to music from all
over the world,” says Idan. Idan started
playing the accordion when he was 9 years
old, and even at this young age was
attracted to the exotic sounds of Gypsy
music and tango.
As a teenager, Idan started playing
keyboards, and studied jazz in high school,
which honed his skills at improvisation and
working with other musicians. In Israel,
military service is mandatory for all young
men and women, so at 18 Idan was conscripted
into the Israeli army. Ironically, it was in
this military setting that Idan developed
musical skills that would prove essential
later in life. Rather then heading to the
front lines in this volatile region, Idan
joined the Army rock band and toured
military bases performing covers of Israeli
and European pop hits. As the musical
director of the group, he became adept at
arrangements and producing live shows, and
turned his experience in the Army into a
productive and positive one.
After he was discharged Idan starting
working as a counselor at a boarding school
for immigrants and troubled youth. Notably,
the school was filled with young people from
Ethiopia who were part of Israel’s growing
community of Ethiopian Jews. It was here
that Idan first started getting familiar
with Ethiopian folk and pop music. While
most of the young people in the school
rejected their own cultural traditions in an
effort to assimilate into mainstream Israeli
society, a small core of Ethiopian teenagers
remained fans of Ethiopian music. They
passed around cassettes of songs from
artists like Mahmoud Ahmed, Aster Aweke,
Gigi and others, and the exotic,
otherworldly melodies piqued Idan’s
curiosity. “I started to hear lots of
cassettes from Addis Ababa. Village music,
like Ethiopian pop and reggae, or the native
village songs,” says Raichel. “I noticed
that immigrants from the Ethiopian community
changed their names when they got to Israel.
They try to assimilate into Western culture
and don’t keep their roots.” He wanted these
kids to “remember that they like hip-hop but
they are not from Harlem, they like reggae
but they are not Bob Marley. The Ethiopians
have a great culture that should be
cherished.”
Idan started going to Ethiopian bars and
clubs in downtown Tel Aviv. It was like
entering another world, a country within a
country that remains a secret from most
Israelis. As his connections to the
community deepened, Idan began attending
Ethiopian synagogues, weddings and other
ceremonies, and he began to learn more about
Ethiopian music and culture.
Meanwhile, Idan had become a successful
backup musician and recording session player
for some of Israel’s most popular singers.
After a few years of helping others gain
success and notoriety, Idan decided it was
time to pursue a project that reflected his
musical ideals, and he began working on a
demo recording in a small studio he set up
in the basement of his parent’s home in Kfar
Saba. He thought it would be a good idea to
invite a number of different singers and
musicians to participate, in order to better
demonstrate his different styles and the
ways in which he worked with a variety of
artists.
Idan had long been fascinated with the
diversity of Israel and sought to celebrate
his appreciation and respect for different
cultures through his music. Because of its
open door to immigrants from Jewish
communities around the globe, Israel is home
to a stew of cultures and traditions,
including people of Middle Eastern,
Mediterranean, Latin American and Eastern
European roots. Yemenite Jews offer
traditions that reflect thousands of years
of living in the country of Yemen on the
southern edges of the Arabian Peninsula.
Israel’s Sephardic community consists of
people who had incorporated the traditions
of Spain, North Africa and the Mediterranean
region where they had lived for centuries.
The largest immigrant population in Israel
consists of Ashkenazi Jews, who had come
mostly from Russia and Eastern Europe (Idan’s
is himself of Eastern European descent).
More recently, over 85,000 Ethiopian Jews
now call Israel home after efforts to
naturalize this so-called “lost tribe of
Israel” through dramatic airlifts in the
1980s and 90s. In addition, there is a large
Arab community, which makes up almost 20% of
the official total population of Israel.
Idan invited over 70 of his friends and
colleagues from Israel’s diverse music scene
to participate in his recordings. He never
expected his musical experiments to turn him
into Israel’s biggest musical phenomenon in
recent memory. Idan created the core songs
of his first album as a demo, and began
shopping for a record label to help him
produce a full album of his own. While most
of the Israeli labels considered his work
too “ethnic” and too outside of the norms of
the formulaic Israeli pop scene to have any
hope of success, one A&R man, Gadi Gidor at
Helicon Records, instantly heard the
potential in Idan’s work and quickly signed
him on to the roster. The subsequent album
was an immediate hit. The haunting Ethiopian
chorus of the first single, “Bo’ee” (Come
With Me), sounded completely unlike anything
most Israeli’s had heard before. Yet,
coupled with Idan’s richly poetic lyrics of
love and devotion and sophisticated
contemporary production techniques, the
single struck a chord with a wide swath of
the Israeli public.
As the interest in the recording began to
grow, demand for live shows increased,
including an offer Idan couldn’t refuse from
the prestigious Opera House of Tel Aviv.
Given the number of musicians who
participated in the recordings, it would
have been impossible to have them all appear
on stage, so Idan decided to pick seven
members in addition to himself who were both
versatile and strong individual artists in
their own right.
From the beginning, Idan saw the project as
a collaboration between artists who each
bring their own musical culture and talents
to the stage. “There would be no front man,”
Idan says. “I would sit at the side and
watch things and see what occurs. Every song
would have a different singer, we would sit
in a half circle and each musician would
have a chance to demonstrate what they have
to offer.” The live show became symbolic of
the album, as it brought together a group of
people of different backgrounds but each is
equal to the other.
This sentiment is reflected in the decision
to name the collective The Idan Raichel
Project. Says Raichel, “If I had called the
album just ‘Idan Raichel,’ people would have
thought that Raichel is the main voice on
all the songs. I wrote the songs and I
arranged and produced them, but I perform
them together with other vocalists and
musicians. On the other hand, we are not a
group. It’s something in between."
In its recordings or on stage, The Idan
Raichel Project has featured a fascinating
array of participants. Cabra Casey is a
singer of Ethiopian heritage who was born in
a refugee camp in Sudan during her parent’s
journey to Israel. She grew up in a diverse
immigrant community in Southern Israel, and
met Idan when they were both serving in the
Israeli Army. Mira Anwar Awad, who sings on
the dramatic Arabic-language track “Azini,”
is an Arab Israeli who grew up in the
northern city of Haifa. A well-known singer
and actress, Awad had participated in
numerous musicals and theatrical productions
in Israel.
Sergio Braams, who sings on the dancehall
inflected track “Brong Faya” (Burn Fire)
among others, immigrated to Israel from the
country of Suriname on the Caribbean coast
of South America. Braams has infused the
spirit of Caribbean music into the Tel Aviv
scene, and was the leader of a reggae band
for which Idan played keyboards. Braams is a
cofounder of and performer in the popular
musical review called Mayumana, the Israeli
equivalent of the percussion show Stomp.
While The Project has featured many young
artists who represent the cutting-edge of
popular Israeli music, Idan has also invited
a number of elder statesmen who bridge the
generational gap and demonstrate the
timelessness of the Project’s music.
Shoshanna Damari was an Israeli singer of
Yemenite heritage who had been one of
Israel’s most beloved singers for decades.
Damari passed away in 2006 at the age of 83,
after making her last recordings as part of
the Idan Raichel Project and participating
in a number of live concerts with the
collective.
Hailing from a Yemenite community that has
staunchly maintained their traditional way
of life, 76-year old Yihia Tsubara sings on
“Im Tachpetza” (If Thou Wisheth) along with
his son Shalom Tsuberi. The appearance was
unique because not only did these firm
guardians of ancient tradition allow their
music to be blended with modern electronic
beats and mixes, they even agreed to perform
new Westernized versions of lyrics from the
Diwan, the traditional Yemenite prayer book.
The last track on The Idan Raichel Project
features South African singer Bongani Xulu,
who happened to see The Idan Raichel Project
perform during a trip to Israel. He came up
to Idan after the show and expressed how
much he loved the performance, and Idan
invited him to participate on the moving
anthem “Siyaishaya Ingoma” (Sing Out For
Love). The song symbolizes the global reach
and relevance of The Project's underlying
message.
Idan’s right hand man and closest
collaborator on The Project is drummer and
producer Gilad Shmueli. Himself a respected
producer of many popular Israeli artists,
Shmueli has played an essential role in the
development of The Project since the
beginning.
The groundswell of interest propelled the
album to sell over 150,000 copies (triple
platinum) and firmly establish Idan as a new
type of Israeli pop star. His follow-up
album in 2005 featured a number of hit
songs, including the Ethiopian flavored
“Mi’Ma’amakim” (Out Of The Depths), and
proved that Idan was a unique talent that
offered a new vision for how Israelis, their
neighbors in this volatile region, and
people all over the world, can cherish their
own cultural traditions, celebrate their
differences and through respectful
collaboration create new and inspiring
expressions.
Members of the Jewish, Ethiopian and Israeli
communities around the world have known
about the Idan Raichel Project for a number
of years now, and he regularly sells out
concerts in large performance venues in the
U.S., Europe and elsewhere. In November
2005, for example, the Idan Raichel Project
headlined at the renowned Kodak Theater in
Los Angeles, the same venue from which the
Oscars are televised. The Project also gave
two well-received shows at the famed Apollo
Theater in Manhattan’s Harlem neighborhood.
While in New York, Idan and members of The
Project visited a number of schools and
churches in Harlem as one of many regular
bridge-building efforts the group has
undertaken.
In January, 2006, The Idan Raichel Project
traveled to Ethiopia, the land that had
inspired so much of its music. Two of the
lead singers of the Project came to Israel
as children during the migration of
Ethiopian Jews to Israel in the 1980s. The
trip marked the first time they had returned
to the land of their birth, and it was also
the first time an Israeli artist had
performed in Ethiopia. The band was happy to
learn that their songs “Bo'ee” and
“Mi’Ma’amakim” had earned a fair share of
radio airplay locally. The Idan Raichel
Project opened the Fifth Ethiopian Music
Festival in Addis Ababa, sharing the stage
with top Ethiopian performers, including the
legendary Mahmoud Ahmed. The story of the
Project’s emotional trip to Israel was
filmed for a forthcoming documentary which
will be released in early 2007.
In the fall of 2006, the work of The Idan
Raichel Project will be released outside of
Israel for the first time on the new record
label, Cumbancha. Founded by Jacob Edgar,
the longtime head of A&R and music research
at Putumayo World Music, Cumbancha seeks to
present exceptional artists from around the
globe whose work merits attention by a wider
public.
The Idan Raichel Project, a compendium of
the most notable songs from the Project’s
two Israeli albums, will be released on
November 7th, 2006 in conjunction with a
special Putumayo World Music collection
featuring Idan Raichel entitled One World,
Many Cultures. The Putumayo album focuses on
cross-cultural musical collaborations and
also features appearances by Willie Nelson,
Ziggy Marley, Youssou N’Dour and many
others. A portion of the proceeds for One
World, Many Cultures will go to support the
nonprofit organization Search For Common
Ground (www.sfcg.org), which works to
transform the way the world deals with
conflict - away from adversarial approaches
and towards collaborative problem solving.
The international release of The Idan
Raichel Project promises to bring even more
renown to this inspirational recording
project. Along with the release, The Idan
Raichel Project plans to embark on a
significant international tour that will
bring them back to the United States, Europe
and elsewhere to present their powerful and
entertaining musical message to new
audiences throughout the globe.
Hi-resolution photos, detailed biographies,
tour dates, music videos and other materials
are available for download at:
http://www.cumbancha.com/albums/idan_raichel_project/press
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Last update: December 2006
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