Sneha Girap (Editor)

Zohar Argov

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Zohar Orkabi

Movies
  
Kasach

Role
  
Singer

Name
  
Zohar Argov

Genres
  
Mizrahi


Zohar Argov Zohar Argov

Born
  
July 16, 1955 (
1955-07-16
)

Died
  
November 6, 1987, Rishon LeZion, Israel

Spouse
  
Bracha Argov (m. 1972–1978)

Albums
  
Elinor, As of Today, There Where Times, My Life Passes By, A Sea Of Tears

Similar People
  
Gili Argov, Eyal Golan, Omer Adam

Zohar Argov (Hebrew: זוהר ארגוב‎‎, born Zohar Orkabi on July 16, 1955 – died November 6, 1987) was a popular Israeli singer and a distinctive voice in the Mizrahi music scene. Argov is widely known in Israel as "The king of Mizrahi music".

Contents

Zohar Argov httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen001Zoh

Zohar argov singing marlen


Biography

Zohar Argov Zohar Argov Sod HaMazalot YouTube

Zohar Argov was born in Rishon LeZion. He grew up in a poor family, the eldest of ten children. He committed suicide in 1987 at the age of 32. His son, Gili Argov, is also a singer.

Musical career

Zohar Argov 11562625jpg

Argov's debut album Eleanor (1981) featured the title track, "Sod HaMazalot" ("The Zodiac Secret"), and "Mah Lakh, Yaldah?" ("What's With You, Girl?"), a tribute to his ex-wife, Bracha, who remained the love of his life.

Zohar Argov Israel Music Zohar Argov Once Upon a Time YouTube

While Argov's career was dotted with creative and personal lapses caused by his heroin and crack cocaine addictions, his musical achievements overshadowed his personal problems. He was able to sing in live performances even under the influence of drugs. Argov was among the first singers to achieve commercial and nationwide success in the sphere of Middle Eastern-Mediterranean/oriental (Mizrahi)-style music, despite the fact that his music was not mainstream at the time and radio stations gave predominance to pop music from overseas.

Legacy

Zohar Argov 03507139jpg

After his death Argov continued to retain his status as "HaMelekh" (the King) of Mizrahi music. From 1990, three years after his death, the Israel Broadcasting Authority organized a series of annual memorial concerts at Binyanei HaUma convention center in Jerusalem and a fundraising campaign was launched to establish a drug rehabilitation center named for him.

A mainstream label, Hed Artzi, released a double album of his music, "Zohar Argov: The Best." Argov was the subject of a play mounted at the Cameri Theater in Tel Aviv, and a feature film on his life, "Zohar," enjoyed commercial success.

His songs, among them "Perakh BeGani" ("Flower in My Garden"), "Mah Lakh, Yaldah?" ("What's With You, Girl"), "Ba'avar Hayu Zmanim" ("In The Past") and "Badad" ("Alone"), are now Israeli pop classics and an integral part of national culture. Proposals to name streets after him in Rishon Lezion and Tel Aviv were discussed in 2007 but sparked a controversy due to his conviction on rape charges, for which he spent a year in prison.

References

Zohar Argov Wikipedia


Similar Topics