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Crowded in the Ear

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Released
  
1975 (1975)

Artist
  
Kaveret

Label
  
Hed Arzi Music

Recorded
  
1974

Release date
  
1975

Genres
  
Rock music, Israeli rock

Crowded in the Ear mediaisraelmusiccomimages72454127jpg

Length
  
43:58 (original release), 55:04 (re-release)

Kaveret albums
  
Poogy in A Pita, Poogy Tales, Kaveret In The Park

Jingzhi li mukhitdinov avissar crowded in the ear tribute


Crowded in the Ear (Hebrew: צפוף באוזן, Tzafuf BaOzen) is the third and final studio album by Israeli rock band, Kaveret, released in 1975.

Contents

Background

After the huge success of the band's first two albums (Poogy Tales and Poogy in A Pita), they decided to change musical direction. The first two albums were written by Danny Sanderson, while all the band members participated in writing this album. Each song was played through and the band decided whether to include it in the album. The band worked for six months on the album while living in a kibbutz.

The band members pursued different musical directions and contributed new influences to the band's sound. Yoni Rechter turned to progressive rock and was a member of the progressive rock duo 14 Octaves (along with Avner Kener) at the time. Efrahim Shamir and Alon Olearthick turned to jazz. The result was the band's most diversified album, but this cost the band many fans and finally led to the band's break-up in 1976.

Songs

Only two songs were written by Sanderson - "HaYsh Hakhi Mahir" (The Fastest Man) and "Inspector Piqeakh" (Smart Inspector) that reprised the band's original sound, characterized by melodic rock and nonsense. The humor was still present in songs such as "Goliat" (Goliath) a parody about the biblical story, "Lu Lu" and "Tango Tzfardeim" (Frogs Tango) and more.

The song "HaOlam Sameakh" (The World is Happy) was composed in the samba, a musical style that was popular in Israel at the time. The song was played after a skit in the band's shows. The song "Shi'ur Moledet" (Country Lesson) was originally composed by Shamir in Polish, and the lyricist Eli Mohar wrote Hebrew lyrics for the album. This song, along with other quiet songs in the album such as "Hi Kol Kakh Yafa" (She's So Beautiful), didn't initially become a success with the fans who expected humor, but as the time passed the songs became one a favorite.

The album's back cover was painted by Yossi Abulafia using images inspired by the album's songs in the style of Terry Gilliam's artworks for Monty Python.

Reception

The third album sold 30,500 copies, fewer than the first two. The band's live shows also met with less success. Nonetheless, the band was the most successful band in Israel, winning "Band of the Year" for the third time in the Army Radio and the "Song of the Year" with "Goliat."

Bonus tracks in the CD edition

References

Crowded in the Ear Wikipedia