Mixtape Part IV: War, Peace, and Bumper Stickers
In our season finale, we explore two songs that—perhaps more than any others—capture the complex and intermingled nature of Israeli society: a military band’s hit that, in its afterlife, became an anthem for peace, and a rap tune penned by the country’s leading novelist
Over the last four episodes, we’ve told the stories behind some of Israel’s most iconic songs. When we set off on this journey, we hoped to find a unicorn, a unifying island of Israeliness that escapes the usual polarization dominating almost every conversation about Israel. Instead we discovered that music not only reflects, but often amplifies, our contrasts. We all sing in different keys, with different words and in different voices. And that, at the end of the day, is what Israel is all about. It is not that the inherent complications stop existing. It’s just that somehow, miraculously perhaps, the cacophony can almost sound harmonious.
In today’s episode, the final installment of the Mixtape miniseries, we turn to Yitzhak Rabin’s 1995 assassination, and to two songs—one taking us decades back, the other catapulting us forward into the 21st century—that symbolize the messy multifariousness of Israeli society.
Act 1: “A Song for Peace.” When it first came out, in the middle of the War of Attrition, “Shir La’Shalom” was an antiwar hymn sung, paradoxically, by a military band. Meant to be an Israeli version of Hair’s “Let the Sunshine In,” it was quickly banned by generals and labeled as both defeatist and demoralizing. But a quarter of a century later, it resurfaced in what would turn out to be one of the most fateful nights the country has ever known. Hannah Barg tells a story of a song, a dream, and a musical reincarnation. This story was written, recorded, and produced together with Maya Kosover and Yochai Maital.
Act 2: “Can’t Afford the Luxury of Despair.” On the day after Rabin’s assassination, author David Grossman was driving up to Jerusalem. On the side of the road he saw a religious settler standing next to his Volvo, peeling off bumper stickers with particularly provocative right-wing slogans. In his mind, David could trace a direct line, or chain, starting with inflammatory statements made by irresponsible politicians, continuing in the offices of creative copywriters who fashioned them into catchy phrases, on to drivers who adorned their cars with the stickers, and ending with a man with a gun in his hand shooting the prime minister. His eight-year-long attempt to decode that chain led to one of Israel’s most popular rap songs of all time. Host Mishy Harman shows how bumper stickers can betray the DNA of a nation.
The original music in this episode—including the covers of “Shir La’Shalom” and “Yihiye Tov”—was composed, arranged, and performed by the Mixtape Band, led by Ari Wenig and Dotan Moshanov, together with Ruth Danon, Eden Djamchid, and Ronnie Wagner-Schmidt. The episode also includes “Shirat Ha’Sticker” (“The Sticker Song”) which was written by David Grossman and composed, sung, and performed by Ha’Dag Nachash together with Ahuva Ozeri. The episode was recorded by Ben Wallick and mixed by Sela Waisblum. It is based on Israel Story’s latest live show tour, “Mixtape.” You can listen to Part I of the miniseries here, Part II here, and Part III here. Thanks to Shlomo Maital, Eli and Mira Kosover, Dalit Ofer, Hanoch Piven, Naomi Schneider, Mikey Ezrachi, Lior Zaberg, Yotam Micharl Yogev, Sheila Lambert, Megan Whitman, Robin Mancoll, Annie Sandler, Ben Murane, Pamela Lavitt, Elaine Cohen, Eric Segal, Bar Sananes, Chrissy Rinehart, Yael Bermano, Valentina Khomenko, Rachel Schy, and Rebekah Steinfeld.
Listen to the full episode here, or download it from iTunes. You can hear all of Israel Story’s episodes in English here and in Hebrew here.
Israel Story, the English-language version of the popular Israeli radio program Sipur Israeli, is distributed by PRX and produced in partnership with Tablet.
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