Poogy in a Pita

Poogy in a Pita (Hebrew: פוגי בפיתה, Poogy BePita) is the second album by the Israeli rock band Kaveret, released in 1974.[1][2][3]

Poogy in A Pita
פוגי בפיתה
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 15, 1974
RecordedFebruary - March 1974
StudioTritone Studios, Tel Aviv
GenreRock, Israeli rock
Length33:05 (original release), 42:31 (re-release)
LabelHed Artzi
ProducerAvraham Deshe ("Pashanel")
Kaveret chronology
Poogy Tales
(1973)
Poogy in A Pita
פוגי בפיתה

(1974)
Crowded in the Ear
(1975)

Songs

About a year after forming the band and the release of the first album, Poogy Tales, the band released their second album, which succeed less from the first album, but included many hits. Most of the album's songs are a new recordings of older songs of Danny Sanderson, mostly from the rock operas that preceded Kaveret. In that album also the songs were characterized by Nonsense and wordplays.

The greastest hit from the album, is "Natati La Khayay" (I Gave Her My Life) that was the Israeli entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1974, and won in the seventh place. The song "Okhel TaTzipornaim" (Eating the Fingernails) was originally a part of the rock opera "HaSipur Hamakhrid 'Al HaYeled MiBrazil" (The Horrific Story About the Boy from Brazil) (1971) and "Shir HaMekhiron" (The Price List Song) was originally a part of the "Poogy Opera" (1972). The song "Moshe Ken, Moshe Lo" (Moshe Yes, Moshe No) was originally called "Mushroom Revolution", and was written by Sanderson when he was in The Nahal Band.

The album also included a cover to the song "Hora He'akhzut" (Hora Settlement) that was performed by The Nahal Band at the evening of the Nahal Band songs. The album also included nonsense that were performed at the band's live shows "Sukar BaTe" (Sugar in the Tea) or "Shir Mekha'a (Antibiotiqa)" (Protest song (Antibiotics)) that was written by Yoni Rechter, a short parody about Bob Dylan, and the first song which Rechter sang in solo.

Some of the songs introduced new musical styles: The instrumental "HaTamnun Ha'Itter" (The Left-handed Octopus) included influences of oriental music. It was performed by "The Schnitzels", the beat band of Alon Olearthick and Sanderson, and played in the two versions of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra (Conductor: Zuzu Musa). Also the song "LeAmor 'E'Lavi" included Oriental influences. The song was written together with the qanun player, Abraham Slaman. The closing song "HaBalada Al Ari VeDerchi" (The Ballad of Ari and Derchi), is a progressive rock song, that wasn't a success in the band's live shows. In the song, Gidi Gov plays on a recorder, and Rechter plays mellotron, synthesizer and moog, which were unusual instruments for the band at the time.

In 1990, the album was re-released on a CD, along with four bonus tracks that weren't included in the original release. Most of the bonus tracks are improvisations that were played during the band's rehearsals.

Commercial performance

The album made Kaveret the Band of the year in Kol Yisrael (for the second time), and the band's live shows continued to be a success. "Natati La Khayay" won the Song of the Year in 1974, and also reached the Israeli Annual Hebrew Song Chart. The songs "HaBalada Al Ari VeDerchi" came as No. 9 and "Shir HaMekhiron" came as No. 25.

Track listing

  1. Natati La Khayay - I Gave Her My Life (נתתי לה חיי) - 2:58
  2. Moshe Ken, Moshe Lo - Moshe Yes, Moshe No (משה כן, משה לא) - 3:14
  3. Okhel TaTzipornaim - Eating the Fingernails (אוכל ת'ציפורניים) - 2:32
  4. L'amour Et La Vie (לאמור א'לאבי) - 4:05
  5. Sukar BaTe - Sugar in the Tea (סוכר בתה) - 2:49
  6. Hora He'akhzut - Hora Holding (הורה היאחזות) - 3:32
  7. HaTamnun HaItter - The Left-handed Octopus (התמנון האיטר) - 3:14
  8. Shir HaMekhiron - The Price List Song (שיר המחירון) - 3:20
  9. Shir Mekha'a (Antibiotiqa) - Protest Song (Antibiotics) (שיר מחאה (אנטיביוטיקה) - 0:49)
  10. HaBalada Al Ari VeDerchi - The Ballad of Ari and Derchi (הבלדה על ארי ודרצ'י) - 6:32

Bonus tracks in the CD edition

  1. "Im Haya Li Lev Zahav" - If I Had a Golden Heart (אם היה לי לב זהב) - 2:21
  2. "Hora" (הורה) - 2:54
  3. "Tnu Likhiot" - Let Us Live (תנו לחיות) - 1:56
  4. "Hafsaqat Khashmal - Power Outage (הפסקת חשמל) - 2:14

Personnel

  • Danny Sanderson - vocals, guitars, music, lyrics
  • Gidi Gov - lead vocals, tambourine, recorder on track 10
  • Efraim Shamir - lead vocals, guitars, harmonica
  • Alon Oleartchik - vocals, bass guitar, music, lyrics
  • Yitzhak "Churchill" Klepter - vocals, electric guitar
  • Yoni Rechter - vocals, piano, Fender Rhodes, Moog synthesizer, Oberheim synthesizer, Mellotron
  • Meir "Poogy" Fenigstein - drums, percussion, spoken word and vocals as "Poogy"
gollark: Oh yes, I'll just multiply things by 10^6, I can DEFINITELY do that mentally.
gollark: It turns out that computer algebra is hard.
gollark: One of my eternally unfinished projects is a CAS/calculator, but it can't do unit conversion.
gollark: Almost but not quite exactly one gram. Weird.
gollark: Oh yes, this does imply 1 gram per m² of surface, that might be hard.

References

  1. "Poogy Bepita". AllMusic. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  2. "Poogy – פוגי בפיתה". Discogs. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  3. "Poogy in a Pita". Israel Music. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
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