Shlomo Gronich

Shlomo Gronich (born January 20, 1949; Hebrew: שלמה גרוניך ) is an Israeli composer, singer, songwriter, arranger, and choir conductor.

Shlomo Gronich grew up in a musical family in Hadera. He holds a B.A. in Music Education from Tel Aviv Educational Academy, and a B.A. in Composition from the Mannes School of Music, New York City. He is married to Michal Adler, a harmonica player. He wrote a song called Shir Israeli. His composition "HarmoniCadence" is being played frequently by harmonica clubs in Taiwan.

Gronich is most widely known for composing and performing Israeli pop, folk and rock songs. His unique style blends different music genres, including Shirei Eretz Yisraels (the arch typical Israeli music style between 1940 and 1980), Israeli progressive rock with influences of rhythm and blues, jazz, ethnic, Mizrahi music, klezmer music and Middle-Eastern.

He has more than 15 albums, including –

He has composed music for film, writing more than 15 film scores, including:

He composed music for more than 20 theatre shows, including –

Gronich has also written music for ballet. His dance pieces include –

Gronich composed more than a hundred classical compositions, many of which were performed by the world's most notable orchestras including the Berlin Philharmonic.

Gronich composed and arranged a unique Israeli-Palestinian peace and coexistence song, called in Hebrew Hevenu Shalom Aleinu (We brought peace upon us) and in Arabic Ma'na Ajmal Min Salam (There is nothing more beautiful than peace). He gathered together a group of Jewish-Israeli and Palestinian singers and musicians to perform a beautiful, Middle-Eastern-style song, with a melody that combines Israeli rock, Arab pop, and Mizrahi musical elements (see #External links). The song was commissioned by the organization Peace Child Israel and adopted as its anthem. The lyrics alternate between Hebrew and Arabic, culminating in the refrain which is sung simultaneously both in Hebrew and Arabic. In the arrangement of the song, Gronich included the oud and the shofar. In July 2011, the song won Third Prize in the global Call for Music Videos of Palestinian-Jewish Duos or Groups presented by the Jewish-Palestinian Living Room Dialogue.

In 2017, shortly before Gronich was to receive the Prize for Jewish Culture from Shlomo Gronich for a lifetime achievement, a 25-year-old woman publicly accused him of sexually harassing her and claimed he had done so to other women in a Facebook post, urging minister Naftali Bennett not to award him the prize. The statute of limitations was already in effect by then. His friend, poet Meir Wieseltier, dismissed them as payback for Gronich insulting her singing aspirations and abilities. Following the accusation, another woman came forward and accused Gronich of attempted rape. The prize was ultimately awarded to Gronich, but he was absent from the ceremony, and his wife accepted it on his behalf.

On April 19, 2022, while appearing at a music festival in Ein Gev, Gronich praised the audience for being cooperative “Ashkenazim” rather than chakhchakhim, a term similar to arsim but with stronger ethnic implications. He was chided for it at that very event, and later came onstage to apologize for what he claimed was a joke. Still, the remark received many disdainful reactions, from politicians and fellow performers, and his family explained it was the result of early stages of dementia.

Details

Vorname:Shlomo
Geburtsdatum:20.01.1949 (♑ Steinbock)
Geburtsort:Chadera
Alter:75Jahre 3Monate 16Tage
Nationalität:Israel
Sprachen:Hebräisch;
Geschlecht:♂männlich
Berufe:Singer-Songwriter, Komponist, Pianist,

Merkmalsdaten

GND:N/A
LCCN:N/A
NDL:N/A
VIAF:11601661
BnF:N/A
ISNI:N/A
LCNAF:n97841677
Filmportal:N/A
IMDB:N/A
Datenstand: 06.05.2024 04:21:54Uhr