Berry Sakharof

Berry Sakharof

Berry Sakharof at Festival HaTamar.
Background information
Born July 7, 1957 (1957-07-07) (age 54)
Izmir, Turkey
Genres Rock
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Years active 1973–present
Labels Nana Discs, Crammed

Berry Sakharof (Hebrew: ברי סחרוף‎) (born July 7, 1957) is an Israeli rock guitarist, songwriter and singer.

Contents

Biography

Sakharof was born in Izmir,[1] Turkey in 1957. His family immigrated to Israel when he was 3 years old.

Start of career

Sakharof started his musical career at the age of 16 as a member of Cosmic Dream. Another member was his friend, Rami Fortis. Together they performed in rock clubs in Israel.

The Eighties

Sakharof first came to public attention in the 1980s.

Right after his military service Sakharof flew to Belgium where he became a founding member of Minimal Compact, the first Israeli rock band to achieve significant success outside Israel. The band recorded six albums.

In 1988, Minimal Compact broke up after the members did not get work visas for the United States, where they planned a concert tour. Sakharof and fellow former Minimal Compact guitarist Rami Fortis began an extended period of collaboration, eventually returning to Israel and producing many songs.

The Nineties

After leaving Fortis, Sakharof continued producing albums. The album Signs of Weakness (סימנים של חולשה), a collaboration with multi-instrumentalist and producer Rea Mochiach, was chosen as the 11th best album ever (and the highest ranking for an Israeli album) by a readers' poll on the popular news site ynet.[2]

By the mid-1990s, Sakharof's was one of the highest-grossing live acts in Israel, and he was commonly referred to in the media as the "prince of Israeli rock" [1].

Sakharof's biggest commercial success came in 1998 with the release of Touches (נגיעות), the sales of which reached platinum within several days.

The 2000s

In 2001 his album "The Other" (האחר) was released. The album included the song "Lord of World" which was written by Barry Hazak, a soldier who died in the Yom Kippur War and a cover of Ehud Banai's song "City of Refuge". The album's name was taken from the perception of "The Other" (French: 'L'autre') of the French philosopher Emmanuel Lévinas, who is also quoted in the album's booklet. "Monsoon" was the only song from the album broadcast on the radio as a single. In the same year Sakharof wrote soundtracks for two Israeli movies.

In 2002, Sakharof collaborated with Erez Aizen and Amit Duvedevani of Infected Mushroom to create the Birthday EP.

During 2005 his album 11 Alef (11א) was released. The album is the result of about two years of mutual work with Rea Mochiach (who moved to the United States after the release of the album 'Signs of Weakness') during Mochiach's occasional visits to Israel. The album was sold in the first week only on the Internet in the MP3 format and later released to the music stores; due to the release of the album Mochiach arrived in Israel and participated in a short concert tour with Sakharof.

In 2006 Sakharof reunited with Fortis for a new album and a tour.

Discography

Solo Albums

With Minimal Compact

With Fortisakharof

With Foreign Affair

References

  1. ^ Berry Sakharof
  2. ^ מצעד 100 האלבומים הטובים בכל הזמנים, YNet

External links