Jump to content

Jonathan Bar Giora

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jonathan Bar Giora
Background information
Born (1962-06-08) 8 June 1962 (age 62)
Jerusalem
OccupationComposer
Instrument(s)Piano, Keyboards
Years active1990–present

Jonathan Bar Giora (Hebrew: יונתן בר גיורא; born 8 July 1962) is an Israeli composer and pianist. Since 2000, Bar Giora has composed scores and soundtracks for over 150 Israeli films such as Bonjour Monsieur Shlomi,[1] Time of Favor, A Quiet Heart[2] and Aviva, My Love. He also worked as a composer and music arranger and producer with Israeli artists such as Yossi Banai, Shalom Hanoch, Riki Gal, Miri Mesika and many others.

From 2011 until 2015, Bar Giora served as the head of the film music and sound design department at the School of Audio & Visual Arts at Sapir Academic College, where he is now the head of the BFA program. He also teaches at Beit Berl College.

His composition style presents diverse influences, from Mizrahi music, Jazz, Classical music, Rock music to Electronic music.

He has collaborated with various Israeli musicians, such as Meir Banai, Riki Gal, Haïm Ulliel, Miri Mesika, Yehonatan Geffen, Ninet Tayeb and Ester Rada.

Biography

[edit]

Jonathan Bar Giora was born in Jerusalem, Israel, in 1962. When he was 16, he left high school and started playing in local piano bars. All through the 1980s he played jazz and wrote music-related articles for the local press. In 1990 he staged a one-man show I'd be delighted to meet you after the plague, which he wrote, composed and performed (Director: Shlomo Vazana). A secondary character in that show, Michel Clayderlast, became successful when Bar Giora created "Live Elevator Music". A performance-art show debuted at the 1990 Israel Festival, featuring Clayderlast playing 20-second bits of popular music live inside in elevator (20 seconds is the average time elevator users spend inside). In 1991 he staged Erua Mochi, a rock spectacle presenting a new musical style: "Live Acid". The band, led by Bar Giora, played looped music live in an attempt to reduce fears among live musicians, at a time when electronic and sampled music threatened to wipe all their job opportunities.[citation needed]

1992 was dedicated to Jesse's Carnival, a gloomy cabaret show with singer-songwriter Jonathan Licht.[citation needed]

In 1993, Bar Giora created a Fringe theatre show, Entebbe - The Musical with Etgar Keret. Bar Giora composed all of the songs and original score, and the show won first prize at Acco Festival of Alternative Israeli Theatre.[3] The rest of the 90s were dedicated to theater music, TV work (musical director of Ad Eser, a weekly talk show with Merav Michaeli, music for Meni Peer's TV show, and many others). In 1999 he wrote the music for Pgisha Leiyn Kets, a special CD dedicated to the poetry of Nathan Alterman, read by one Israel's leading actors Yossi Banai. That same year he composed Joseph Cedar's feature film Time of Favor. It was a first in a series of more than 150 movie scores (TV dramas and documentaries included) he composed from 2000 on. In August 2018 the Tel Aviv, Jerusalem & Haifa Cinematheques held a special tribute to his work for films and television.

In August 2018 Helicon released the album Themes (in Hebrew: "תֵּמוֹת"), the first anthology of music composed by Bar Giora for films.

Early in 2020 the Israeli Andalusian Orchestra dedicated a concert to Bar Giora's works titled "Soundtrack of the Heart" (in Hebrew: "פסקול הלב"). That same year Bar Giora won The Israeli Documentary Filmmakers Forum Award for best score for his "Spotting Yossi"'s original score (In Hebrew להאיר את יוסי).

Selected works

[edit]

Original Soundtrack for Feature-Length Films

Original Soundtrack for Feature Length Documentaries

Original Soundtrack for Television Movies and Television Series

Original Music for Theatre

Music Albums

Original Music for Video-Art and Musical Works

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Watch Bonjour Monsieur Shlomi Full Movie Online, Release Date, Trailer, Cast and Songs | Comedy Film". www.digit.in. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  2. ^ Dalton, Stephen (6 December 2016). "'A Quiet Heart' ('Lev shaket meod'): Film Review | Tallinn 2016". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  3. ^ Abramson, G. (2004). Encyclopedia of Modern Jewish Culture. Encyclopedia of Modern Jewish Culture. Taylor & Francis. p. 461. ISBN 978-1-134-42865-6. Retrieved 8 December 2022.
[edit]