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Sephardi music pioneer Jo Amar dies in New York Sephardi music pioneer Jo Amar dies in New York
Published: June 30, 2009, 12:15
Initially a Hebrew teacher who dabbled in liturgical and Andalusian music in his native Morocco and continued to work as a teacher after his arrival in Israel in 1956, Amar showed up in the Israel Radio studios in the late 1950s with a tape of his music. At that time, Ashkenazi singers and musicians ruled Israel's music world, and the music of the Edot Hamizrah (people of the East) was all but taboo. Amar's unusual voice appealed to the people who listened to the tape, and they decided to record him in the studio. Since not all the soundproofing features that exist today were available at the time, radio employees outside the studio could hear him. They were so entranced by his singing that the studio began to fill up with admirers. It did not take long for Amar to make a career change and to become a full-time singer and composer. His popularity soared not only in Israel, but also among America's Sephardi population. Notwithstanding the adulation and icon status that he received in Israel, Amar often felt like a second-class citizen and spoke out strongly against the discrimination to which North African and Asian Jews were subjected. In 1970 he moved to New York, where he felt his talents were more appreciated than they were in Israel. He also branched out from the spiritual to the spirited, composing and singing many songs that became folk tunes. In constant demand as both a cantor and a popular singer, he toured the US and Europe, and returned to Israel from time to time to record with the Andalusian Orchestra. Just under a year ago, Amar was honored with a tribute concert at the Jerusalem Theater where both Mizrahi and Ashkenazi performers sang some of the songs that he made famous. At that time, he was no longer capable of singing; illness had bound him to a wheelchair and robbed his voice of its power. Amar produced more than 20 albums and taught many students in the cantorial workshops he conducted. He also published an anthology of Moroccan liturgical music. While radio stations in Israel and around the world were playing recordings of pop icon Michael Jackson, who also died at the end of last week, Israel Radio's Keren Noibach announced on her early morning program Seder Yom (Agenda) that she had no intention of playing Jackson, but would play Amar. Other program hosts on the station followed Noibach's example and interviewed folk music experts and students of Amar's, who reminisced fondly about his influence on them personally and on Israeli music in general - how he fused the traditions of Spain and Morocco with modernity.
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