Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Ey Sham

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Country
  
Israel

As
  
Ilanit

Composer(s)
  
Nurit Hirsh

Artist(s)
  
Hanna Drezner-Tzakh

Language
  
Hebrew

Lyricist(s)
  
Ehud Manor

"Ey Sham" (Hebrew script: אי שם, English translation: Somewhere) is a song by Israeli singer Ilanit, written in Hebrew by Ehud Manor and composed by Nurit Hirsh. The song represented Israel at the 1973 edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, as the country's debut entry in the contest.

Contents

Lyrics

The song is a dramatic ballad, with Ilanit singing about coming to the sudden realisation of what she must do with her lover. She suggests that they "go now", in the hope that "Somewhere – there together we'll find the garden/The garden of love". With the lyrics "There - I saw a rainbow...the morning rises in white" and "We fly beyond the clouds...we'll ask for the azure gardens", she alludes to a heavenly garden. From the tone of the performance, it appears that this is a hope that the pair can be themselves without pressure from others.

Eurovision Song Contest

The song is Israel's debut entry in the annual Eurovision Song Contest, and the first occasion on which a country from outside geographical Europe had competed in the contest. This apparent anomaly is explained by the fact the contest is open to all members of the European Broadcasting Union, an organisation which extends beyond Europe. Written by Ehud Manor and composed by Nurit Hirsh, at the contest the song was also conducted by Hirsh. The two musicians also collaborated to produced the 1978 edition's winning Israeli entry, with Manor producing overall six more Israeli entries.

At the contest the song was performed seventeenth and last (following France's Martine Clémenceau with "Sans toi"). At the close of voting, it had received 97 points, placing 4th in a field of 17, which for the next 20 years held a record for the highest placed debut for a competing country in the contest.

Despite this achievement, Ilanit stated she feels the song could have placed higher with revealing an argument she had with composer Hirsh over her own desire for a composition which "attacks" the listener by starting with the refrain, exploiting the three-minute limitation rule of the contest's entries, against Hirsh decision to compose the intro as "something artistic and mysterious".

The song was succeeded as Israeli representative at the 1974 Contest by Poogy with "Natati La Khayay".

References

Ey Sham Wikipedia


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