Static & Ben El Tavori

Static & Ben El Tavori (Hebrew: סטטיק ובן אל תבורי) are an Israeli musical pop duo comprising the singers Liraz Russo (aka Static) and Ben El Tavori. Their musical producer is Yarden Peleg (aka 'Jordi').

Liraz Russo & Ben El Tavori
Static (right) and Ben El Tavori live in Kiryat Ata, 2016
Background information
Origin Israel
Genres
Years active2015-present
Associated acts
Members
  • Liraz Russo (Static)
  • Ben El Tavori
  • Yarden Peleg (Jordi) - producer

Biography

Static

Liraz Russo (Hebrew: לירז רוסו; born 8 December 1990), best known as Static (סטטיק) was adopted by an affluent Israeli couple, Moshe and Nitza Russo, at the age of four months, and he was raised Jewish in Haifa, Israel. He does not know his country of birth, although he has mentioned that it is possible he was born in Latin America.[1] He began learning to play the piano at age three, and later switched to guitar. At age 15, he performed in municipal festivals with a Haifa youth band. He did his mandatory military service in the Israel Defense Forces as an officer in the Israeli Air Force, but was discharged early and did not complete full military service due to health reasons. After being discharged, he began working with music producer Omri Segal, which opened doors for him in the music industry.[2] He adopted the stage name "Static", a nickname that had been given to him by a childhood friend. His breakthrough came in 2015, when together with DJ Gal Malka, he released the song "Ba La Lirkod", which entered the Galgalatz playlist and became one of the most successful Israeli songs of the year.

Ben El Tavori

Ben El Tavori

Ben El Tavori (Hebrew: בן-אל תבורי; born 22 December 1991) is the son of Israeli singer Shimi Tavori and Aviva (née Azulay). Their family is of Mizrahi Jewish (Yemenite-Jewish and Moroccan-Jewish) descent. When he was a child, his parents divorced. In 2005, at age 14, he sang publicly for the first time with his father. In 2007, at age 16, he auditioned for the seventh season of Kokhav Nolad together with his brother Daniel, but only his brother was accepted. He did his mandatory military service in the Israeli Air Force.[3] In March 2011, he released his debut album. His cooperation with Russo and Peleg on the Ron Nesher song "#DubiGal" is considered his breakthrough.

Jordi

Yarden Peleg (Hebrew: ירדן פלג; born 20 January 1987), best known as Jordi (ג'ורדי), was born in Kiryat Motzkin, Israel. His family is Jewish and his parents are Tzvi and Malka Peleg. Peleg's father was a radio broadcaster, and as a child, he visited his father many times at the radio station where he worked. At age 12 he began making music, and at 17, he dropped out of high school and produced his first song. At age 18, he built a recording studio in his home. In 2013, he opened a studio and began working as an independent producer. He worked with various artists, and first met Static while working on a song by the band KYD which also featured Alon De Loco and Static.

Musical collaboration

Static, Tavori, and Jordi cooperated in rapper Ron Nesher's 2015 single "#DubiGal". From then on, Static and Tavori began recording songs together, and Jordi produced their music. Every single by Static & Ben El Tavori has been accompanied by a music video which has received tens of millions of views on YouTube. Their first single "Barbie" was released in November 2015, was a success and entered the Galgalatz playlist, becoming Static's second song and Tavori's first to do so. Three months later they released their second single "Kvish Hachof", about the two's many trips on Israel's coastal road, since Static is from Haifa and Ben El is from Tel Aviv.

Their third song "Silsulim", which came out in June 2016, won the 'Song of the Year' award on Reshet Gimmel's Annual Hebrew song chart for the year 5776. In the Galgalatz chart that year, they won 'Breakthrough of the Year' and 'People of the Year'. In September 2016, they released the song "Stam". Their fifth single "Zahav", together with a 1950s-themed music video, came out in January 2017.

From the fourth season onwards, Static and Ben El have been on the judging team of the reality show HaKokhav HaBa.[4]

In 2017, they won the ACUM Prize in the Inbal Perlmutter 'Achievement of the Year' category. That year they also participated in the Festigal,[5] and appeared in an advertising campaign by the fashion company Castro.[6]

In June 2017, they released the Brazilian-themed song "Tudo Bom" which contains a few words in Portuguese. This song became widely popular in Israel and also drew significant attention from Brazil. The pair were invited to visit the Brazilian Embassy and meet the Brazilian Ambassador to Israel.[1][7] The song broke the record for the highest number of views of an Israeli song on YouTube in one day. As of December 20, 2017, the total number of views currently sits at over 44 million, also the highest of any Israeli song.

A later single, "Hakol Letova", was released in October 2017. The song broke the record for number of plays of an Israeli song on the radio in one day, with 80, exceeding the previous record of 66, also held by Static and Ben El, with the song Tudo Bom.[8] In January 2018, they released the song "Namaste" together with singer Liora Yitzhak.

In March 2018, they signed a ten-year deal with Capitol Records to produce seven international albums in English. They worked with songwriter Emily Wright. However, Israel will remain the main focus of their activity.[9][1] In May 2018, they released the Japan themed song "Kawaii."[10]

In August they released the song "Gumigam." Their first English song, "Broke Ass Millionaire", set to the tune of "Silsulim", was released in November 2018, and subsequently an English version of Tudo Bom was released in collaboration with J Balvin. On January 15, 2019, they released the Greek-themed song "Yasu" in collaboration with Eden Ben Zaken and Stephane Legar. This was followed up with the African-themed song "Bananot", produced in collaboration with Marvin Casey in June and "Imale" in October.

In January 2020 they released "Further Up (Na, Na, Na, Na, Na)", a song in collaboration with Pitbull. The following month they released the French-themed song "We" in collaboration with Miri Mesika. In June 2020 they released the song "Habib Alby" with Nasrin Kadri as the official song for Tel Aviv Pride Week in 2020. The song's lyrics alternate between Hebrew and English and contain some Arabic phrases, including the song's name, which means "Love of my Heart" in Arabic. They followed up by collaborating with Flipp Dinero to release the English language song "Milli", with a music video that drew heavily from their music video for "Imale". They then released "Kapit Ahad Shel Tov" ("One Teaspoon of Good").

Discography

Singles

Title Hebrew Year Peak chart positions Album
ISR US Latin
"Barbie" ברבי 2015 non-album-singles
"Kvish Hachof" כביש החוף 2016
"Silsulim" סלסולים
"Stam" סתם 1
"Zahav" זהב 2017 1
"Tudo Bom" טודו בום 1
"Hakol Letova" הכל לטובה 2017 1
"Namaste" נמסטה 2018 1
"Kawaii" קאוואי 1
"Gumigam" גומיגם 1
"Broke Ass Millionaire"
"Yassu"

(with Eden Ben Zaken and Stephane Legar)

יאסו 2019 1
"Tudo Bom"

(solo or with J Balvin)

"Bananot"

(with Marvin Casey)

בננות 1
"Imale" אמאלה 1
"Further Up (Na, Na, Na, Na, Na)"

(featuring Pitbull)

2020 1 15
"We"

(featuring Miri Mesika)

1
"Habib Alby"

(featuring Nasrin Kadri)

חביב אלבי 2
"Milli"

(featuring Flipp Dinero)

"Kapit Ahat Shel Tov" כפית אחת של טוב
gollark: I'm using some random cheap phone from about two and a half years back, and it's held up well apart from the touchscreen not responding half the time now and also the battery being fried.
gollark: Android won't even let you stick anything but some apps' data and random files on SD cards. It is very irritating.
gollark: What happened to just being able to buy µSD cards instead of overpaying for internal storage‽
gollark: The upcoming iPhone 13: is actually named the iPhone XRsMV Max++ 1000, is a 5mm thick aluminium block with screens on both sides, costs $5000, will immediately break if it is dropped, hit hard, or held wrong.
gollark: You could use a KVM switch or some VNC-type thing.

See also

References

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