Wow, I relate to so many things in this episode. For starters, I’m an American who grew up in Israel, so I have that accent that Ami was referring to 😅. I had that pointed out to me once when I was auditioning for a voiceover job, and the director asked the technician, “Is she Canadian?” -“No, she’s Israeli.” 😅 Secondly, I live in Efrat. Thirdly, I’m a songwriter, and I deeply connected to what Shmuel was saying about giving your listener value beyond being able to relate to the feelings in the song. A remedy. I love that! In my songwriting I try to write about feelings that the listener might not have access to in daily life, just like Shmuel beautifully described, and give them hope. But in my journey I have yet to be able to write from my personal point of view. These days my songs are sung by different biblical characters at a certain point in their story (Moses, Joshua, Noah), but the truth is that the emotions in the song come from me, only with a mask. Because I also love bringing the bible closer to people, so win-win. Thank you, Ami, for this interesting episode and for being you and also for regularly making us laugh with your incredible impressions. Especially now with war raging and our hostages held in captivity, we could use all the humor we could get.
@irinasegal2772 ай бұрын
Beautiful song, voices
@Judys_Jewish_Music2 ай бұрын
Blessed to meet Shmuel after HASC 24. We spoke & took a photo. 🙏🏻🙏🏻
@ADHDHobbyHopper2 ай бұрын
Wowwwwwww ✨🤌🏼🤩 I haven’t watched the episode yet but damn this voice 👼🏻
@AmisHousePod2 ай бұрын
Right?
@motibrody41022 ай бұрын
Love it 😀
@nancykisich3263Ай бұрын
My grandma played the Mandolin!
@mtm5783Ай бұрын
Just wow❤
@musicizexpression2 ай бұрын
Insightful discussions - thank you! Shmuel seems like a unique soul, thank you for sharing your light and music ✨. And Ami - you too funny 😅
@Judys_Jewish_Music2 ай бұрын
1st introduced on his duet with Mordy Shap- friends with Drummer Yaniv Rozenfeld