The busiest creator in the Jewish music industry Aharon Razel releases another sweet, the heart and spring, which he sings together with his good friend, Yosef Nativ.
Aharon recounts:
"These days, days of war in the steppes of Ukraine, but - this too will pass. What will remain before my eyes forever is Rabbi Nachman isolated among the reeds by the river in Breslav. When Rabbi Nachman told 'stories' he hid all his secrets and teachings under the guise of Such is the story of the 'Heart and the Spring', a story of longing, prayer, closeness to God, and the repair of the soul."
In my wife's family, Efrat, they read the story every year during Sukkot, and thus the melody for the song was born during one of the holidays. "And this heart stands and longs for the spring..." We sing in chorus, and I remain intrigued as to what our rabbi would say about my melody.."
"I had the privilege of hosting a wonderful singer and composer, Yosef Nativ, whose songs we listen to a lot at home and on family trips."
"I came from the world of music even before the answer," Yosef Nativ told me.
"Aharon's songs were for me an opening to Jewish music and it is a very exciting closing of the circle to collaborate with Aharon Razel".
The heart wants to get closer
to go to the spring
, it goes up, but for a moment it does not see
the stone there on the edge of the mountain
, and if it does not see the spring , the
soul of the heart of the world
returns to it, the heart of the world stands at one end of the world,
and that is the mountain with the stone and the spring standing far away, somewhere the
heart And the spring is a song from the album as the missing son, and it is released as part of a series designed to pay respect to the songs that are hidden in the album and were not released as singles.
As the longed-for son stands out as one of the finest albums that Aharon created, one of the hits in which "I am different" entered the playlist on Israeli stations, the other songs star in the playlists of ultra-Orthodox radio stations.
Words: Rabbi Nachman of Breslav
Adaptation of text and melody: Aharon Razel
Arrangement and musical production: Aharon Razel and Avi Tal
Artistic consultation: Efrat Razel.
Aryeh Zamir, submitted on behalf of Shoba Israel
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