"Hava Nagila" (Hebrew: ??? ??????, Havah Nagilah, "Let us rejoice") is an Israeli folk song traditionally sung at Jewish celebrations. It is perhaps the first modern Israeli folk song in the Hebrew language that has become a staple of band performers at Jewish weddings and bar/bat mitzvah celebrations. The melody is based on a Hassidic Nigun and it was composed in 1915 in Ottoman Palestine, when Hebrew was being revived as a spoken language for the first time in almost 2,000 years (since the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE). For the first time, Jews were being encouraged to speak Hebrew as a common language, instead of Yiddish, Arabic, Ladino, or other regional Jewish languages.
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Origin
Abraham Zevi Idelsohn (1882-1938), a professor at Hebrew University, began cataloging all known Jewish music and teaching classes in musical composition; one of his students was a promising cantorial student, Moshe Nathanson, who (with the rest of his class) was presented by the professor with a 19th-century, slow, melodious, chant (niggun or nigun) and assigned to add rhythm and words to fashion a modern Hebrew song. There are competing claims regarding Hava Nagila's composer, with both Idelsohn and Nathanson being suggested.
The niggun he presented has been attributed to the Sadigurer Chasidim, who lived in what is now Ukraine, which uses the Phrygian dominant scale common in music of Transylvania. The commonly used text was probably refined by Idelsohn.
In 1918, the song was one of the first songs designed to unite the early Yishuv [Jewish enterprise] that arose after the British victory in Palestine during World War I and the Balfour Declaration, declaring a national Jewish homeland in the lands newly liberated from Turkey by the Allies and entrusted to Britain under the Treaty of Versailles. Although Psalm 118 (verse 24) of the Hebrew Bible may have been a source for the text of "Hava Nagila", the expression of the song and its accompanying hora ("circle") dance was entirely secular in its outlook.
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Lyrics
Note: The "?" can be pronounced as a voiceless pharyngeal fricative [?] (as in classical Hebrew) or a voiceless uvular fricative [?], as "ch" as in Bach (modern Hebrew pronunciation).
Notable performers
- Idelsohn produced the first commercial recording in 1922, on the Polyphon record label, as part of a series which recorded 39 Hebrew folk songs.
- Singer Harry Belafonte is known for his version of the song, which was recorded for his album Belafonte at Carnegie Hall in 1959. He rarely gave a concert without singing it, and stated that the two "stand out" songs from his professional career were "The Banana Boat Song," and "Hava Nagila". Belafonte noted and claimed, "Life is not worthwhile without it. Most Jews in America learned that song from me."
- Irving Fields
- Red Army Choir MVD Ensemble
- Frank Slay recorded an instrumental rock 'n' roll arrangement titled "Flying Circle" that was a #45 U.S. hit in 1962.
- Chubby Checker
- Connie Francis
- The Spotnicks (surf rock)
- Dick Dale and the Del Tones (surf rock)
- Glen Campbell
- Celia Cruz
- Bob Dylan
- Four Jacks and a Jill released a version of the song on their 1965 album, Jimmy Come Lately.
- Lena Horne
- Jon Lord of Deep Purple included Hava Nagila in his solo keyboard improvisations as heard on Made in Europe (1975).
- Jeff Garlin sings Hava Nagila in the feature film Daddy Day Care
- Raphael
- Dalida
- Neil Diamond, performed Hava Nagila in his 1994 Live In America concert, incorporated it into The Jazz Singer, in which he acted out a cantor with popular-music ambitions.
- Brave Combo
- Anthrax used a heavy metal arrangement of "Hava Nagila"'s main melody in their song I'm the Man.
- Finnish power metal band Sonata Arctica usually ends its shows performing a humorous song, usually referred to as The Vodka Song, played on the tune of Hava Nagila.
- Dream Theater performed a cover of "Hava Nagila" in Tel Aviv, Israel on June 16, 2009.
- Regina Spektor includes a performance of the song as the outro of her song "The Flowers".
- Me First and the Gimme Gimmes played two versions of the song on their album Ruin Jonny's Bar Mitzvah.
- The Smothers Brothers; Tom Smothers plays the song on their album Think Ethnic under the name "Venezuelan Rain Dance"
- The Polish metal band Rootwater performs a rendition of the song on their album "Under"
- Jeff Dunham's puppet "Achmed the Dead Terrorist" whistles this by request while in Israel in the 2014 special "All Over the Map".
- Ben Folds Five released a live recording of the track as the b-side to the UK CD2 of their 1997 hit single "Battle of Who Could Care Less".
- Dillon Francis released a remix of the melody in 2016 for download on his SoundCloud.
- Amsterdam-based gabber group the Party Animals released a happy hardcore version in 1996
Use in sports
Association football
Supporters of the Dutch association football club AFC Ajax, although not an official Jewish club, commonly use Jewish imagery. A central part of Ajax fans' culture, the song Hava Nagila can often be heard sung in the Stadium by the teams supporters, and at one point ringtones of "Hava Nagila" could even be downloaded from the club's official website.
Supporters of the English football club Tottenham Hotspur commonly refer to themselves as Yids and are strongly associated with Jewish symbolism and culture. The song "Hava Nagila" has been adopted as an anthem of sorts by the club, and is one of the most frequently sung songs at White Hart Lane.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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