Welcome to this very special and extra rare rock show from the beautiful land of Israel.
The Israeli scene of the late 60s' experimental art and music could be described as inspirational at best. There were many artists dawdling around Tel-Aviv and Jerusalem at that time; the fastest-growing, most rock-chic cities with a multi-racial metropolitan population. After the War of Independence in 1948, Israeli-Jews began flocking to these two cities mostly to try and make a living, and right after the Six-Day War with the Palestinian and Arab joined-armies in 1967, it was a time of immigrate crest: tens of thousands were leaving their homelands in Europe and other countries to become part of that new ‘little’ land (‘Ieritz HaKtanah’) as Jews call it adding zest and zeal to a rather stick-in-the-mud conservative society.
Israel was ecstatic. The victorious chants were also 'hearable' in other few cities and took shape in a few musical works and artistic films seen in the abundance of 'foreign'-influenced art and a burgeoning garage-band rock scene called 'rhythm bands' or 'Lalkot HaKitziv'. Much of these bands were local r’n’r minimal acts barely capable of leading one another through a typical 'simple meter', 4/4 rock and roll number. The sound was struggling very hard, but as with Turkey’s Altin Mikrofon (Golden Microphone) contest before them, Israelis wanted to get their own Battle of Bands, and called it the ‘Beat Music Festival’. The heat was on, and many bands came and went just as fast lost in total obscurity.
The list of Israeli beat bands is long, but here, I want to feature one band only in one of its earliest ‘garagista’ forms. Please, I know it's a famous sought-after band nowadays that everybody and their dogs know of, but you will get what I'm talking about when you hear the dozen-or-so songs that I upped here by that band. So, be patient, 'kay? Les' rawk awn rawl nows... (drum roll, 'neone?)
The Churchill's:
Most 60’s garage rock aficionados know this band as I've said earlier like their mothers’ names. But, few if any… know its earliest incarnations and/or have any other music by that band other than their sole, eponymous first (and last, sadly), same-titled album issued on the Tel-Aviv label Hed-Artzi in 1970.
Israel was ecstatic. The victorious chants were also 'hearable' in other few cities and took shape in a few musical works and artistic films seen in the abundance of 'foreign'-influenced art and a burgeoning garage-band rock scene called 'rhythm bands' or 'Lalkot HaKitziv'. Much of these bands were local r’n’r minimal acts barely capable of leading one another through a typical 'simple meter', 4/4 rock and roll number. The sound was struggling very hard, but as with Turkey’s Altin Mikrofon (Golden Microphone) contest before them, Israelis wanted to get their own Battle of Bands, and called it the ‘Beat Music Festival’. The heat was on, and many bands came and went just as fast lost in total obscurity.
The list of Israeli beat bands is long, but here, I want to feature one band only in one of its earliest ‘garagista’ forms. Please, I know it's a famous sought-after band nowadays that everybody and their dogs know of, but you will get what I'm talking about when you hear the dozen-or-so songs that I upped here by that band. So, be patient, 'kay? Les' rawk awn rawl nows... (drum roll, 'neone?)
The Churchill's:
Most 60’s garage rock aficionados know this band as I've said earlier like their mothers’ names. But, few if any… know its earliest incarnations and/or have any other music by that band other than their sole, eponymous first (and last, sadly), same-titled album issued on the Tel-Aviv label Hed-Artzi in 1970.
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| The Churchill's in Denmark, 1969. |
The band started outside of Tel-Aviv playing as a set with Haim Romano playing lead guitar. Another Briton called Rob Huxley who co-wrote most of what the band sang in English was before joining the band in England, playing guitar in various beat and freakbeat bands and other R’n’B rock groups. He came to Israel on Christmas' Eve, in 1967 to audition with an Israeli beat band at the Casablan club, Jaffa. His other Israeli pre-Churchill’s band was an outfit named rather mockingly, ‘Purple Ass Baboon’, featuring him, alongside Moti Levi, and Yaki Yusha. He left them to join the Churchill’s (Miki Gavrielov-bass, Haim Romano-lead, Yitzchak Klepter-rhythm guitar, Ami Tribtech-drums), along with a Canadian (Stan Solomon, who used to play for an Israeli beat band called The Saints in Haifa), and they became The Churchill's officially on May, 1968.
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| Cover of the DVD for the film. |
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| French director Ketmor and his wife in a self-portrait. |
In the following link, you can see Katmor's art-band 'The Third-Eye': a take at Andy Warhol's Factory: Biography.
Producer Avraham (Pasha Desheh אברהם דשא - 1926-2004) Pashaniel was disappointed, and later went to produce so-called Army-humor bands' films and T.V.-plays for the collective HaGashash HaChiver, and ultimately because of his Yemeni decent... produced videos for the world-famous Yemenite singer Ofra Hazar getting his ass 'Disney-fied'. As for Katmor... well, he lead a psychedelic life with his wife Hillit Yeshurun (the main actress in the film itself), somewhere off in a hippie commune.![]() |
| The Churchill's, Jerusalem, 1971. |
And The Churchill's? They fled to Denmark achieving minor success as a stage band playing along the line with mega rock stars like Deep Purple and Led Zep, then after four months returned back to Israel to put whatever songs they've made for that art-film into record, releasing it on June, 1970. (Note: some date this album way back to 1968, or 1969. Others go five-years-ahead-of-their-times (as one song by the 'Merry-cunt Third Bardo psych-band went...), ballparking it at 1972). The CD reissue/comp. is to blame as it has their first singles, plus some songs by their second, and third incarnations as heavy prog-rockers (Jericho Jones, Jericho). The first go back to yes, 1968 and the latter to 1971-1972. This is 'zactly where the anachronistic mixup has started. Here is a good introduction for the band with some 'Toube vids, too.
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| A scene shot from Mikre Isha featuring a nude woman. |
So, we all know how that much-sought first LP can fetch in eBay auctions 4000 USD $ and shyat. Still, we didn't hear the whole 'story'. Some blogsites took good notice (cheers out there), to this fact, and downloaded some of these lost gems. I will do the same and as a bonus, will include three never-heard-on-or-off-the-web tracks by that band's 'mockumentary' incarnation 'The Chumps' along with some outtakes from the first album. This short-lived band's name (The Chumps) was the Churchill's way to mock how they used to play so much of the The Champs' world-famous song and hit 'Tequila' in addition to paying homage to Rob Huxley's ex-band the 'New' Tornados. They sang in the three songs that you are free to download in Hebrew-only mostly religious songs in a jocular way, too as to flip a middle-finger salute/flagdown to what has kept them in the backwaters for years; or namely, religious zealotry. (Note: Israeli immigrants who came from ex-Communist states where any religious act was so remorsefully restricted and banned are the trouble-makers in Israel and not the eastern or 'mizrahi' ones who are genuine and peace-loving. Arabs and eastern Jews had lived for aeons together and they lived in cold peace until these stupes begun 'flucking' by. Small wonder the War of Independence way back in 1948 wasn't their last one: it was a war fought for no-one and won by neither the Israeli-Jews, or the Palestinian-Arabs. It still is going on... and on until? Soon we all would find out, but one word of warning: the outcome won't be sweet at all. Trust me on this one).
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| The Churchill's original lineup. |
The name of the band (I mean, The Churchill's), has nothing to do with Anglophilia as some might think, or that fat lard-bucket Sir Winston Churchill. Nah. It's a name taken from the combination of two, or hmm, three Hebrew words to make a new meld-word. To wit, one should write it first as 'Chercaiels': The Song of God. It's short for the Hebrew words 'Ha Chir Shal Iel'. Right on. Their music was so close to Godlike levels, it still resonates with the utmost musicstasy, and one like myself 'ere can only be superglad that many people are starting to clear the ear-dirt inside their brainboxes enough to give bands like The Churchill's a good listen.
So, babes... I shall give y'all first what most of you have surely heard before by this band, and then up as a bonus the stuff that no-one's listened to before. Their first album came with its ten tracks as-it-was released back in 1970. Dig dawgs:
Ah! God fuck it! Whenever I see this cover, I remember how it felt when I got the CD in my mail-box in 2008: I swear it was one of the best moments in my entire life, and wish for those of yinz who've never listened to this album the very exact same. The first time I heard the band was in 1995, though as I still strongly recall. I listened to them by happenstance through 'Galgalatz': the Israeli Army Radio. It's where I myself learned my weakwater Hebrew by just comparing whatever the speaker on the radio says to that of Arabic words. The similarities between our two languages is enormous: Hebrew and Arabic are actually the same Semite language (Aramaic), and then tribes searching for better pastures for their flocks... gave them this 'split-tongue' audible when some letters or words are uttered assbackwards in both langs. There are some strong resemblances letters vis-à-vis. It's just the sad fact that these two nations (Arabs and Jews) might never realize how 'one' they are... or, were. And, will never do. *deep sigh*
This link above has 14 individual tracks that feature the real 'garage-y' sound of the band (The Churchill's/ Chumps/ Jericho Jones), along with alternate takes, outtakes from their first album, and a bonus track or two of Jericho playing live in the late 90's one of my favourite songs of all time (if not THE most): 'When You're Gone', written by Yonathan Geffen; a well-known Israeli singer, sung in both English and Hebrew at a concert somewhere in the late 90's. Another version of this beat-iful(beat-beautiful) song from the film Mikre Isha sung in Hebrew only. Unmissable!
May peace reside in our hearts, and the love of music unite us again. Aye-men!
Thank you. That's all for now.
Trax:
1- Mikre Isha מקרה אישה (Case of A Woman) - In Pieces.
2- Mikre Isha מקרה אישה (Case of A Woman) - When You're Gone (English/ Piano Version).
3- Mikre Isha מקרה אישה (Case of A Woman) - Comics (A.k.a. It's Hard) - (Instrumental Intermission).
4- Mikre Isha מקרה אישה (Case of A Woman) - Song From The Sea - (Intermission).
5- Mikre Isha מקרה אישה (Case of A Woman) - The Doll.
7- The Chumps - Ma'lach (Angel) - (Short Instrumental).
8- The Chumps - Ve Taher Libenu (Our Pure Heart).
9- The Churchill's - Danielle Sanders Walks Through The Park - (Outtakes 1+2).
10- The Churchill's - Little Johnathan (Instrumental).
11- The Churchill's - Sunshine Man - (Outtake).
12- The Churchill's - When You're Gone (Hebrew).
13- Too Much In Love to Hear - Jericho - Live (Bonus).
14- When You're Gone - Jericho - Live (English-Hebrew Bonus).
H.H.




































