The Jewish Folk Song Everyone in Japan Knows

  Рет қаралды 114,440

Unseen Japan

Unseen Japan

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 455
@elliotmerker8539
@elliotmerker8539 2 жыл бұрын
As a little Jewish kid In America, I thought I was going crazy when i realized the music being played on my gameboy pocket when i played one of the mini games that came with the gameboy camera. My parents thought it must have been a coincidence. I FEEL SO VINDICATED!!!
@fluffinmcpuffin1879
@fluffinmcpuffin1879 Жыл бұрын
The juggling one right?
@atomictiger4
@atomictiger4 2 ай бұрын
Look at the KZbin comment section on that one Kirby song…it’s literally a giant pit of anti-semitism
@MechanicalRabbits
@MechanicalRabbits Жыл бұрын
The fact that this song instantly sounds japanese to me shows how much of an influence its had on actual japanese music!
@望月龍-y2q
@望月龍-y2q 9 ай бұрын
This song doesn’t sound Japanese at all. It definitely has something similar to Eastern European music, the rythme and instruments. The version that “sounds” Japanese is definitely a “Japanized” version and not the other way.
@teovu5557
@teovu5557 6 ай бұрын
When you have time Google Japanese Shinto's strange similarity to Israelite stories and jewish traditions. It's a trip!
@charly345mstl
@charly345mstl 4 жыл бұрын
it's not only about Jewish songs but also many foreign music were translated into Japanese, since educators at that time believed that singing those foreign songs would be good for kid's education. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Auld Lang Syne, Grandfather's Clock, The Other Day, I Met a Bear, Flohwalzer, Dona Dona, Неделька, etc... Especially "Auld Lang Syne" is from before the WW2, it spread also to Taiwan, Korea and Indonesia (places where Japan once ruled and soldiers taught kids the song, then localized)
@KayYou687
@KayYou687 4 жыл бұрын
Omg this is amazing!! So fun to learn/see a Jewish folk song spin off into another life in Japan! Very well done video! Loved it!
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
Glad you appreciated it! Always interesting to see where Jewish and Japanese culture intersect.
@bakklajohn
@bakklajohn 4 жыл бұрын
This is sooo friggin cool! I’m Russian with no Jewish heritage whatsoever, but my wife has some, so we applied for Masa program and ended up living in Israel for almost a year. I fell in love deeply with Jewish culture, and having quite a liking for everything Japanese since my teen years I was stunned to find out about Mayim Mayim in Japanese culture. Todah rabah!
@ruxtehdy
@ruxtehdy 3 жыл бұрын
do you happen to know what russian "rondo" dance is being mentioned at 9:47? i've googled around but not coming up with anything definitively related to dance, only rondo music which doesn't appear to be very danceable nor russian in origin.
@veniveniveni549
@veniveniveni549 3 жыл бұрын
@@ruxtehdy check out "kalinka" and russian folk dances
@AbelMaganaAvalos
@AbelMaganaAvalos 2 жыл бұрын
@@veniveniveni549 I am aware..also to continue the list try katyusha
@Hiphop618
@Hiphop618 Жыл бұрын
Late reply but I did a Masa program 10 years ago! Although it was my second time going to Israel for a longer period of time, and I wasn't happily married, just a wide-eyed 22 year-old straight out of college with a desperate need to get out of my parents' house lol
@h.i.sentertainments8580
@h.i.sentertainments8580 8 ай бұрын
As a Japanese myself, I can confirm that I grew up with this song, and heard different versions. It was a huge part of high school cultural festival. Because my school was boy only, it became a place where you invite girls from another schools to dance together. It is basically my equivalent of ball or prom.
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
This video was a lot of fun to make - really enjoyed getting to research aspects of my own culture and how a little part of it has made it so big in Japan. Mayim Mayim is still completely stuck in my head, though.
@DetectiveGesicht
@DetectiveGesicht 4 жыл бұрын
I've only known this song as the Donburi CM song (sang that a lot as a kid). Loved this video, Noah. Thanks for the deep dive.
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
@@DetectiveGesicht Ha, that's pretty funny! Really glad you enjoyed it.
@fabiofukuda6724
@fabiofukuda6724 4 жыл бұрын
I'm Japanese-Brazilian, and I also grew up dancing Mayim Mayim here in every school undokai here in Brazil!
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
@@fabiofukuda6724 That's really interesting! I've actually written two articles about the history of the Japanese-Brazilians for Unseen Japan - I'd like to turn them into videos like this someday! Really a fascinating history.
@fabiofukuda6724
@fabiofukuda6724 4 жыл бұрын
@@noahoskow4551 I would love to read them! not that many people know Brazil has the largest Japanese community outside Japan.
@Marille7982
@Marille7982 2 жыл бұрын
My dad’s jewish and my mom’s dad worked at a Jewish center so I grew up celebrating hanukah and singing a lot of Jewish songs. I have never heard of this song before but I appreciate you talking about Jewish culture on the internet, I am very proud of this side that my dad has taught me and always feel thankful when I find content about it.
@satiricgames2129
@satiricgames2129 5 ай бұрын
Omg same story for me .
@Artemisio987
@Artemisio987 3 жыл бұрын
oh my god is that why 70's tv anime music sounds like klezmer music?? japan fell in love with this particular song and it became a massive inspiration?? (sorry if you talked about this in more detail, i am FLABBERGASTED and had to leave a comment before finishing the video lol)
@omoshirojack
@omoshirojack 3 жыл бұрын
Japanese here. I danced this when I joined school trip. Everybody knows this but most people do not know this is from Israel.
@hahahahahohohoho5085
@hahahahahohohoho5085 Жыл бұрын
Im israeli and its hilarious to me how strongly japan adopted this otherwise lame old boomer folk song. First ive ever heard of it.
@TsovoaLevone
@TsovoaLevone Жыл бұрын
This video is so cool
@extrapolate
@extrapolate Жыл бұрын
We love Japan 🇯🇵 🇮🇱
@showdaprocastinacao1040
@showdaprocastinacao1040 Жыл бұрын
You mean… “weebo here.”
@joanpenn9682
@joanpenn9682 8 ай бұрын
This was a delightful video . At a 70 Year old raised in a mixed Sephardic/Ashkenazi world in Brooklyn, I am very deeply a cultural Jew. . Too Boot with my Japanese daughter in law and bilingual Brooklyn. grandchildren and our upcoming visit to Japan, and my recent Discovery of Ghilbi and Totorro and Ponyo, I hit paydirt with this video ! I was delighted . Thank you so much
@icanwatchthevideos
@icanwatchthevideos 4 жыл бұрын
When my Japanese professor randomly started singing マイムマイム in class one day, my mind was blown. Also just so you know, Hey Alma recently published an article on this topic that more or less lifts a few paragraphs from your script. It does link to your piece but it struck me as a little too direct 🤷‍♂️
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
Hey, thanks for letting me know about this! It's cool that they'd cover the same topic, but you're right - the structural similarities feel like a bit much.
@thedemongodvlogs7671
@thedemongodvlogs7671 4 жыл бұрын
How does this guy not have more subscribers his quality is insanely good!
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
Appreciate you saying so! We're steadily gaining new followers - hope to keep on making content that people seem to enjoy!
@jessicavitale3408
@jessicavitale3408 8 ай бұрын
I once spoke to an Armenian dancing teacher who told me he had been invited to Japan to teach. I asked him "to teach Armenian dancing to Japanese people?"...he said " no, to teach Israeli dancing".
@Z-to-E
@Z-to-E Жыл бұрын
As of now, the new Flandre character in the game "Touhou: lost word" has individual spell cards that spell out the words of the song, as an Israeli person and a Jewish one as well I recognized it immediately and was utterly confused and surprised as this is a song I danced to growing up in a kibbutz.. thank you so much for this well researched video and the well needed explanation!
@Keeper1st
@Keeper1st 4 жыл бұрын
I was similarly surprised to hear the American Civil War song "Marching Through Georgia" in a Japanese context. It's a hugely popular folksong there called "Pai-no-pai-no-pai" with completely different lyrics. Everyone in Japan knows the melody but is completely unaware that it originated during the American Civil War!
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
Interesting! Lots of popular folk songs in Japan stemming from the same era but with minimal context being taught about them. "Turkey in the Straw" is huge, although it's called "Oklahoma Mixer" in Japan.
@juch3
@juch3 4 жыл бұрын
Well i was equally surprised that the song, Glory Glory Hallelujah, they sing in churches over here in South east Asia was also an American civil war song.
@Pantsinabucket
@Pantsinabucket 2 жыл бұрын
@@juch3”Glory Glory Hallelujah”, or the Battle Hymn of the Republic, actually has roots further back than the civil war. The melody is derived from a black spiritual song sung by enslaved workers, which later developed into the battle Hymn’s predecessor, John Brown’s Body, in the years after John Brown’s failed attempt at starting a slave uprising.
@CraftsmanOfAwsomenes
@CraftsmanOfAwsomenes Жыл бұрын
@@Pantsinabucket There's also another step in between. "Hey Brother Will You Meet Us" a song from the second great awakening.
@善悪の基準は人それぞれ
@善悪の基準は人それぞれ Жыл бұрын
As a Japanese, I find it very strange that the theme song of "Yodobashi Camera," the largest electronics retailer in Japan, is the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" from the American Civil War.
@ma7814
@ma7814 3 жыл бұрын
Send a comment from Japan. For a long time, it was a mystery as to which country this song was made in, but it was good to know. At the end of WW2 in 1956, the act of touching the skin between male and female students was avoided in Japan. There may have been various speculations in the nation and school, but I like this song.
@PecanSan
@PecanSan 4 жыл бұрын
FINALLY SOMEONE EXPLAINS IT!!!! I remember when I first heard Mayim Mayim in the middle of an old NicoNico video fuckin YEARS ago. Thought I was goin crazy lol
@nbarshain
@nbarshain 4 жыл бұрын
This is a fascinating video!! I learned so much about Israeli and Japanese history and culture. Very impressive job researching and editing
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
Really glad you enjoyed it!
@dancin4yeshua
@dancin4yeshua 4 жыл бұрын
super video. i've been dancing mayim mayim since 1959 and didn't know half of this. thanks.
@anonymous-ll4qm
@anonymous-ll4qm 2 жыл бұрын
This video is so cool! I am jewish, and lived in israel for my whole 21 years of living. I danced horah in school, and ive heard this song so many time of course. I used to watch the anime channel and even hebrew dubbed animes ever since i was 3. I was in love with japanese culture even as an elementary school kid. Didnt sleep to watch animes in midle school... read manga during breaks... drew anime characters 24/7... listened to japanese music (especially city pop!) A complete otaku. This video had me shocked, that japanese people know such a core part of the jewish culture, and love it. And the fact that it was featured in a movie from the biggest studio in japan!! Amazing.
@crisjapopcris1564
@crisjapopcris1564 Жыл бұрын
I'm Brazilian Japanese and I remember learning マイムマイム (maim maim) and ハヴァナギラハヴァ(hava nagila hava) at a Japanese kindergarten in Brazil. I found out these songs were Jewish many years later, thought they were Japanese because there are Japanese folksongs with uncommon words like the ソーラン節 (soran bushi) song, which my grandmother used to sing to me.
@JB-wc9hn
@JB-wc9hn 4 жыл бұрын
Wow this song takes me back to my days in Jewish day school. I don’t remember being taught the origins of the song just that it was popular in Israel to dance to so this was great to learn. Nice to see how other cultures enjoy traditional Jewish songs. Funny enough Steve Aoki came out with a EDM version of Hava Nagila called “Hava”. Great song to work out to!
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
Had no idea about the Steve Aoki song - that's hilarious. Will definitely have to check it out, thanks!
@JB-wc9hn
@JB-wc9hn 4 жыл бұрын
Unseen Japan of course! It starts out like most EDM songs but just wait for the trumpet part haha
@harrymon0
@harrymon0 3 жыл бұрын
@@JB-wc9hn Thanks for the rec, but it kinda sucks
@Frostyflytrap
@Frostyflytrap 4 жыл бұрын
What a fascinatingly deep history this song has, absolutely astounding. I first heard this from the memes, but I was surprised to learn its Hebrew origins. Thanks for this video! Probably one of my favorite videos of this year. :D
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
Wow, high praise! Thank you.
@fey2450
@fey2450 Жыл бұрын
As an Israeli girl who has heard both Mayim Mayim and seen many of these memes, I'm kind of ashamed of myself for not catching on to the fact it was literally the exact same song... I *did* always think it sounded Jewish.
@Ayelet.M
@Ayelet.M 8 ай бұрын
Mamash aval.😅
@corrincrellin
@corrincrellin 4 жыл бұрын
That was so dang fun and nice to watch, smiled the whole time... Thanks brother for making this!
@toumachigure1557
@toumachigure1557 Жыл бұрын
I'm Japanese and I really feel like there is some sort of cultural bond between the Jewish culture and Japanese culture. for example, although there are no proper founding proof of this but the Japanese-Jewish common ancestry theory is a good example. and lot of old to modern pop culture similarity popping up here and there makes you wonder...
@jennifermalvin8150
@jennifermalvin8150 2 жыл бұрын
Just wonderful! Thank you so much! This short documentary on the history of "Mayim, Mayim," is rich with detail, history, and perfectly integrated video footage. You will leave with a bounce in your step and a smile on your face!
@Baruch-q4n
@Baruch-q4n 8 ай бұрын
I was the only child of Sephardi Greek Holocaust survivors from Salonika/ Thessaloniki the second main city of Greece.I now live in London England.But the best years of my life in Israel where my heart has always remained.Thankyou for this amazing video of us and ours.Obviously I am familiar with these songs from Israel and accompanying music, and Israeli history.But deepest gratitude for this great excellent video from you.
@אלוןשיינפלד
@אלוןשיינפלד 4 ай бұрын
That sounds beautiful Baruch, i hope you one day will come back to Israel to get settled in there until your twilight years
@Nitroxity
@Nitroxity 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for making this! The band who did the version for Pakkun Tamago, Open Sesame, made an album entitled Chocolate Panic for an anime OVA of the same name in 1985, which is how I came across this. The Chocolate Panic album actually engages with a lot of genre and style coming out of parts of Africa at the time, so it's fitting that they would cover such a worldly song. I've ordered the single they released, which apparently has an English version of the song, and I'll be uploading it to my channel as soon as it arrives. Again thank you so much for enlightening me about the song's origins!
@alosyus
@alosyus Ай бұрын
Also. In the anime Gintama they use Adon Olam all the time for sad moment. I was so shocked when I heard it lol.
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 Ай бұрын
For real? That's wild. Need to find a clip of that.
@amptapes
@amptapes 6 ай бұрын
American Jew. Looked up Mayim Mayim for Hebrew school and I found a video of hatsune miku singing it (lmao) which led to this video. So amazing how this song traveled all the way to Japan!
@buntziechurchill6029
@buntziechurchill6029 4 жыл бұрын
At 23:10 (approximately) I was amazed that the background music was a recording of "Mayim" by Hillel and Aviva that was popular in the 1950's. It brought back very happy memories. Excellent choice!!!
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
Nice catch! I really love that version - so beautiful.
@yiddena
@yiddena 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for this:) This explains my family's experience with "Mayim Mayim" when we lived in Japan:) LOL
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
Our pleasure! It's definitely a song you'd eventually notice while living in Japan - glad to help solve its mystery!
@sid.h
@sid.h 4 жыл бұрын
This was such a beautiful story, thank you for telling it!
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching, and really glad you enjoyed it!
@yoshiida9538
@yoshiida9538 7 ай бұрын
Sorry to be a bit off-topic, but there is an interesting historical incident to consider about Jewish-Japanese relations. During the Russo-Japanese War (1904 - 1905), Japan was having hard time raising funds for the war effort. No one in the West wanted to take the risk. But then, it was a Jewish American financier, Jacob H. Schiff, who first bought Japanese government bonds, then this made others to follow. This turned the tide of war in Japan's favor. Without his help, Japan would have lost the war and probably made a Russian colony. We know from his memoir that Jacob Schiff decided to finance Japan because he was upset with the pogrom in Russia. Decades later, Chinue Sugihara, the vice-consul to Lithuania issued thousands of visas against orders from Tokyo, to allow safe passage of Jews fleeing the Nazis to travel across Russia through Siberia, and to Japan, then onward. Well, my theory is that one of the factors behind Sugihara's decision was that he probably knew as a diplomat, that the help from a Jewish American financier was one of the decisive factor that saved Japan. There are other interesting incidents. 20,000 Jews fleeing the Nazis where caught up in the border zone between the USSR and Manchuria. They could not cross the border, and were dying from the cold and hunger. It was the Japanese military there that rescued these Jews and gave them safe passage. The commander justified his action that one of the factors was about the Jewish help during the Russo-Japanese war. Interestingly, the person who supported this action, took final responsibility and rejected demands from Berlin was General Tojo.
@Ezra.G
@Ezra.G 2 жыл бұрын
I’m a Mizrachi Jew of middle eastern parents living in America. I’m grateful to have grown up in a city with a fairly large Jewish population (not NY lol) and I’ve always heard this song growing up. Over the past few years I’ve started becoming more interested in and consuming more Japanese media. I never knew that one of our people’s most beloved songs is so popular there. Thank you for informing me with this video. Happy Jewish heritage month as well!
@Nonrandomnumber
@Nonrandomnumber Жыл бұрын
Lemme guess, LA or Savannah, GA?
@MooMinIL
@MooMinIL 4 жыл бұрын
I love this! I’ve known about this bizarre connection for years now and it has been my go to “WTF” general knowledge fact about japan when talking to other Israelis but now I actually have a video to send them afterwards 😉
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
Ha, that's pretty much why I made the video! The connection is just too weird and fun not to share.
@ocbgrounds6168
@ocbgrounds6168 4 жыл бұрын
Excellent dance history research and visuals. I'll be using a couple of clips from this for my music appreciation class' study of how cultural materials travel from place to place.
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
That's really cool to hear! Hope the class goes well, and thanks for watching.
@MADARA-music
@MADARA-music Жыл бұрын
I have danced to this song in the past. my parents too. All Japanese people know this song. I learned how to dance to this song at school and I really enjoyed it.
@nivsport
@nivsport 4 жыл бұрын
Great video! Loved the in depth research and engaging presentation!
@fullmetal_flamingo
@fullmetal_flamingo 4 жыл бұрын
This is insanely interesting! It reminds me a bit of how my junior high school in the US had us do tinikling (Philippine folk dance with bamboo poles) with pvc pipes, but didn't explain where the heck it came from. Although that case is definitely more of a case of cultural appropriation.
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 4 жыл бұрын
Really appreciate your comment! That's crazy they had you doing tinikling without any contextual explanations - it's such a unique and culturally grounded thing. I'm not sure what the point of teaching a dance like it is without including a lesson on where it comes from and who has traditionally danced it. I actually had never encountered tinikling up until my most recent time visiting the Philippines - I can't imagine it devoid of the Filippino context.
@fullmetal_flamingo
@fullmetal_flamingo 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks. I know, it is absolutely mind-boggling that we would be taught the dance (using non-Filipino music, mind you) without any sort of cultural context. But that's suburban Ohio for you. -_-
@h.cedric8157
@h.cedric8157 4 жыл бұрын
@@fullmetal_flamingo hi there! Greets from the Philippines! In my hometown in the northern Philippines, the cross cultural effect had stayed with my town after the Americans were able to establish a town there more than a hundred years ago. The feel of my town is Little different from an American southern town feel. People wear cowboy hats, country songs blare out loudspeakers, American country inspired bars, house designs(and even our town hospital, Good News Hospital, looks just like it came straight from Little House on the Prairie) Sadly I am stuck in the capital city due to the worsening CORONAVIRUS spread in the Philippines as our Government bungled their management of it. As for Tinikling dance, i fondly remember being rejected as i was never a good dancer and winced home with a purple toe...
@neyamaaty
@neyamaaty 5 ай бұрын
Such an amazing video! Thank you for sharing these great cultural and historical details ❤️🦋
@Japan_Champloo
@Japan_Champloo 4 жыл бұрын
Pardon my English. I'm a Japanese anime fan. I just finished watching Uzaki-chan and I read a comment. It says "Ugh! I knew this anime isn't my cup of tea since I saw THAT Japanese Red Cross Society poster". It rang a bell, so I googled about it. I found your tweet and now here I am. I'm glad I did. I don't like Uzaki-chan, but I like your videos because they're interesting! Only Yesterday and Umai Donburi commercial song made me start liking Mayim Mayim when I was a child. I had no idea that it's a Jewish folk song! This video blew my mind. I also performed a folk dance to songs like "Turkey in the Straw" (American/the early 19th century), Letkajenkka (Finnish) and Korobeiniki (Russian) when I was an elementary school student. Japanese children used to dance in a circle to music. Boys and girls often held hands with each other while dancing to the music. Some boys tended to embarrassed about having to hold girls' hands haha. However, some online articles say they don't really performe a folk dance anymore these days. *sigh*
@edenromanov
@edenromanov 4 жыл бұрын
A very well researched and overall fun video with entertaining edits, subbed
@spaceinvader2017
@spaceinvader2017 2 жыл бұрын
What a great video.I learned so much, other than that the flow, the editing and storytelling of the video is tremendous. I hope I can one day invite this tradition in my country, the way it unites people makes me smile.
@Mrmoe198
@Mrmoe198 4 жыл бұрын
This is awesome! As a Jew raised as a Frum Litvak, this was both a childhood throwback and an informative look at a sharing of our culture that was previously unknown to me. Thank you for putting this together! P.S. Don't pay attention to those criticizing your voice. You are you, you did what came naturally, and I appreciate you.
@aleckiscar7909
@aleckiscar7909 3 жыл бұрын
And oddly enough, this is not the first case of a jewish/israeli folk song becoming a Japanese song and part of the culture. For example - hora hadera (הורה חדרה) is used for the music theme of voltes v opening song.
@ellielarsen3673
@ellielarsen3673 2 жыл бұрын
Great video, very interesting. I Love the song and the dance. Incredible research and editing to the video making it flow, smoothly and easy to follow. Well Done.
@MetFanMac
@MetFanMac 4 жыл бұрын
Minor corrections: The Torah isn't the Old Testament, but rather the entire Tanach, of which the Torah comprises the first of three portions. And it isn't "orientalist" to think Yemenite Jews had a closer connection to ancient Jewish life, it's an acknowledged fact due to their relative isolation and strict religious adherence over the centuries. Also, major props for a dispassionate and objective description of the history of Mandatory Palestine.
@urijahkaplan1855
@urijahkaplan1855 4 жыл бұрын
That is not correct. Depending on context, Torah can mean "Chamishei Chumshei Torah" (aka the Five Books of Moses/Pentateuch), TaNaCh, (aka the Old Testament/Torah Sh'Biksav) or everything (Torah Sh'Biksav and Torah Sh'Beal Peh).
@SpeakingSeriously
@SpeakingSeriously 4 жыл бұрын
Wonderful video - very well curated ! My only grumble is that the print of the subtitles overlay some of the descriptions on the photos. But fortunately there is rewind. Signed... an old Israeli Folk dancer from Texas.
@mk-la
@mk-la 9 ай бұрын
Maybe that's why the soundtracks of 70's to early 80's anime sound vaguely Jewish to me
@animemarvelmdkfan7091
@animemarvelmdkfan7091 3 жыл бұрын
Hello Unseen Japan. Loved the video, great research, exept one major miss. You didn't mention the Composer of Maim Maim - Emmanuel Amiran (Pugachov). He is the one who made the music. In 4:52 it's written: "לחן: עמנואל עמירן (פוגצ'וב)", but you didn't give him credit at all.
@revangerang
@revangerang 2 жыл бұрын
12:15 talks about the composer
@KitaruTC
@KitaruTC Жыл бұрын
The video discusses the arranger, but not the original composer. If I understood other sources correctly, Emanuel Amiran-Pougatchov is credited with the original composition and lyrics. Yehuda Sharett worked on the arrangement that was used with Else Dublon's choreography at the 1937 festival to celebrate discovering water. The misunderstanding may have come from a reading of a translation of Else Dublon's comments on the event, which read "Yehuda gave me his song 'Usha’avtem,' which he had orchestrated, ..." without mention of the original composer Amiran. However, I don't know German to determine if the nuance of the original text ("Yehuda gab mir sein Lied Ushavtem, das er orchestriert hatte, ...") conveys that it was Sharett's orechestration, or if Dublon was simply unaware of the previous composition by Amiran.
@catherineoskow2690
@catherineoskow2690 4 жыл бұрын
Such an interesting cross-cultural connection!
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
It really is, isn't it?
@PrincessOzaline
@PrincessOzaline 2 жыл бұрын
Conversion student, and student of Japanese wanting to be a J > E translator. I hadn't come across this song at Shul yet, maybe because of the pandemic and being an an adult. But now it's lived in my head for the past two days and I have to show all the Jewish anime fans I know clips of it before following up with your video. This is so cool.
@aimeeorkin4482
@aimeeorkin4482 4 жыл бұрын
This taught me many new insights into the historical and cross cultural connections of Japanese, Israeli, Jewish American folk dance, music and animation! I loved all the fun video research woven together! What a great documentary! Nice narration!
@abbyrobinson-q9k
@abbyrobinson-q9k Жыл бұрын
Noah--that was one of the most fascinating stories I've ever heard!!! Thank you so much!!!
@samuelforesta
@samuelforesta 3 жыл бұрын
You have no idea how overjoyed I am to hear about this
@DjVortex-w
@DjVortex-w 3 жыл бұрын
When I was linked to this video, I thought "hmm, quite interesting", but was thinking of just watching a couple of minutes of it. 25 minutes later, still watching.
@yanivPressesCircles
@yanivPressesCircles 4 жыл бұрын
Found this on reddit, very happy i did Amazing video Subbdd!
@josh64big
@josh64big Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing. This was incredibly well written and informative video essay.
@normal6483
@normal6483 Жыл бұрын
I grew up dancing to this song, and I saw the meme versions and heard it in anime, but somehow I never made the connection that it was the same song! The world is an amazing place.
@DanLuxe
@DanLuxe 3 жыл бұрын
This was an awesome video! Well done!
@SongSparrow1
@SongSparrow1 Ай бұрын
So the US government pulled a Henry Ford?
@stopsomewhere9104
@stopsomewhere9104 2 жыл бұрын
Love this video too!! One thing I would be super interested in, thinking of that bit about organic farming, would be the Yamagishi Association, something I have been trying to learn more about
@eileentruehawaii1875
@eileentruehawaii1875 3 жыл бұрын
I had to practice and dance to this song at my elementary school I went in Japan on a field day every single year. I didn’t know it was a Jewish song.
@sapimen
@sapimen 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! It was so informative!
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@Roarshark12
@Roarshark12 4 жыл бұрын
*Fantastic*!! Wow, you put so much work into that. I liked the great source material you drew from!
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@Roarshark12
@Roarshark12 4 жыл бұрын
@@UnseenJapan Hai! As an Israeli-American Jew, I'm very interested in Japanese-Israeli cultural interchange. I found fellow Israelis in every nook and cranny in Japan when I toured there almost twenty years ago. I understand that one of the Japanese counting systems comes from a Hebrew phrase? In any case, I'd love to learn more about how the Japanese and Israeli cultures positively affect one another :) Thanks again for a great video!
@ferretsnax
@ferretsnax Жыл бұрын
Wow, this was so interesting. Thank you for sharing!♥
@KiwiFMA
@KiwiFMA 3 жыл бұрын
I always wondered about this!!!! I've heard the tune in countless animes, and always laughed it off as a "similar sound", but this is so cool!!!!
@Rita1984
@Rita1984 11 ай бұрын
As someone who went to 13 years of Zionist orthodox yeshiva, none of these tunes were ever played at siyums or yom yerushalaim celebrations. Hava nagila is never played at orthodox weddings. Mayim mayim was never played ever bc it’s a secular song. I only know about it from stereotypes of jews from the media.
@WaterSeesWater
@WaterSeesWater Жыл бұрын
今の小学校はわからんが、昔の小学校の音楽の時間では、いろんな国の民謡が歌われた。音楽の教科書に載っているからね。蛍の光は、アイルランド民謡だし、黒い瞳は、ロシア民謡。明治期の日本の音楽家たちは、欧米諸国の民謡=フォークソングをもとに日本人用の学校でみんなで歌う歌を作って行ったのだ。現代日本語自体、欧米諸語を翻訳する作業から生まれてきたと言える。
@NKatz
@NKatz 3 жыл бұрын
I'm so in love with you lol I'm a Jewish woman that LOVES anime! I never knew this! Very cool!
@halbour
@halbour Жыл бұрын
I'm a Jew from Israel. What a great video to watch!
@jacobbowser1158
@jacobbowser1158 2 жыл бұрын
Love this video! As someone who only recently found out that I am half Jewish by birth and have been trying to learn as much as possible about Jewish history and where my father's family comes from this video brought a tear to my eye. Thank you!
@RachelShauna
@RachelShauna 4 жыл бұрын
19:56 is literally what every jewish wedding/ bar & bat mitzvah looks like tho omfg i love this.
@Becca-hp4bg
@Becca-hp4bg 4 жыл бұрын
LMAO TRUE
@lavenderaqua2655
@lavenderaqua2655 4 жыл бұрын
YES
@erezgotbored
@erezgotbored 3 жыл бұрын
That was amazing to watch, thank you! Any chance that those pictures of Jerusalem are located somewhere on the web? It is incredible to see such beautifully preserved footages.
@Paul-oi2wz
@Paul-oi2wz 3 жыл бұрын
I love how you avoided getting this video flagged, very clever.
@anthropologicalminds2855
@anthropologicalminds2855 4 жыл бұрын
Cool, you guys should connect with the Jewpanese Facebook page. They look at fusions and cultural connections between Ashkenazi and Japanese overtime.
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
We'll definitely be sending them the video! Noah's actually written some previous articles on Jewish-Japanese themes that have been featured on their page before.
@ねるさん-c1k
@ねるさん-c1k Жыл бұрын
There are traces of many Jews who came to Japan, and it is said that there are some customs that only Jews and Japanese do and some Hebrew-like words or not. Recent geological research has revealed that there was a major volcanic eruption in southern Kyushu during the Jomon Period, about 7,300 years ago, before the Yayoi Period. The volcanic ash made western Japan uninhabitable, and people who evacuated to the Korean Peninsula returned to Japan during the Yayoi Period. It is also said that there may have been groups of people who went to China, India, and the Arab world, and returned to Japan after many generations of mixed blood. It has recently been said that the returned groups may have left behind Jewish customs, language and traces in Japan.
@cerealandchoccymilk
@cerealandchoccymilk Жыл бұрын
as a japanese guy who grew up in the us, i knew about mayim mayim from the konami version and the memes (i actually made one once too, years and years ago lmao). i had no idea it was a real folk dance, or even had jewish origins!! the vibes and instruments of the konami version had me convinced that it was of chinese origin for some reason lol. awesome video!!
@dactylntrochee
@dactylntrochee Ай бұрын
That was informative, touching, and downright amazing (and I'm a pretty jaded old [1952] American)
@cadacuro
@cadacuro Жыл бұрын
Amazing content and great historical content! And yes, Mayim Mayim has stucked in my head!
@B4R0N.
@B4R0N. 4 жыл бұрын
That was extremely interesting! And now I have to take this song outta my head.
@nikkin3752
@nikkin3752 Жыл бұрын
Honestly absolutely blew my mind! Of all the songs I was expecting, it wasn't that one, so imagine the surprise on my face when Mayim Mayim started playing. An incredibly fascinating video!
@songstresspriestess
@songstresspriestess 4 жыл бұрын
So neat! Thanks for this educational, neat episode... Shalom!
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
Shalom! Glad you enjoyed it!
@MadameSomnambule
@MadameSomnambule Жыл бұрын
I remember hearing this folk song in a Gameboy Camera minigame based on the Game and Watch game, Ball. Never knew what it was until recently.
@ydanese3518
@ydanese3518 Жыл бұрын
Well, being Japanese and Jewish, I never knew why this song was always staple in undou kai
@pattyoconnell1950s
@pattyoconnell1950s 3 жыл бұрын
Everyday I walk to my mailbox and back home. About 15 minutes. Mayim Mayim is my new folk song to hum as I walk. Thank You enjoying your video. In 1987 My family hosted a Japanese Exchange Student in Stockton CA. Her name was Miuki Takanaka…spelling might be a little misinterpreted. She later married and her last name was Sazuki on Valentines Day In Japan.
@tahimwaicij
@tahimwaicij 7 ай бұрын
omg this is perfect! never in a million years did i expect to hear mayim mayim in a japanese fllm:) the Jewish gal in me is so happy
@ichi_san
@ichi_san Жыл бұрын
This is awesome thank you This song is such an awesome one, so thank you for explaining its origins 3:36 yess the electric version of this song ive heard before
@trollingisasport
@trollingisasport 2 жыл бұрын
I taught at an elementary school and was surprised that it was one of the songs to teach.
@dlrussek
@dlrussek 2 жыл бұрын
What a musical trip you provided, Noah! Thanks so much. I know the song since I was a small boy and I would have never imagined the connections you reveal. This video uncovers so many interesting facts about folk music and its dissemination around the world.
@SomeFerret
@SomeFerret 5 ай бұрын
I don't have the most intimate connection to this song but I do remember as a kid I somehow had ahold of the Sexy Parodius version on Flipnote for the DS and I made a little animation of a little stick figure clumsily going through some sort of parkour stage, usually falling and getting hit to the beat of the music. I think my DS died before I could save it and eventually I lost all the files to time but I really liked that song and thought I would never hear it again, now years later I got a little thread that lead me here and it's so satisfying to not only hear it again but learn more of it and see how well documented it is.
@Goudenogen
@Goudenogen 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this beautiful video 💖
@UnseenJapan
@UnseenJapan 4 жыл бұрын
You're welcome! Glad you enjoyed it.
@kaidolt
@kaidolt 2 жыл бұрын
heard the song after watching techii no kuni and had to know where this song came from, thanks!
@Drifter_ssu
@Drifter_ssu 3 жыл бұрын
マイムマイムにそんな歴史があったとは
@ryomahoffman6803
@ryomahoffman6803 4 жыл бұрын
I’m half Japanese half Jewish so this was cool
@noahoskow4551
@noahoskow4551 3 жыл бұрын
Nice! Always cool to find those instances where both cultures meet.
@jiafeiskinnyproducts
@jiafeiskinnyproducts 3 жыл бұрын
ayyy same
@VictorLaszlo46
@VictorLaszlo46 Жыл бұрын
Moroccan Jew, right here, much family came to Israel in '48. The rest went to the US, but we all know the song regardless of where we are.
@itamar7559
@itamar7559 9 ай бұрын
This made me smile… I love Japan and its people ❤
The Japanese who Came to Call Brazil Home
22:52
Unseen Japan
Рет қаралды 39 М.
The Traumatic and Inconsistent Ideology of Zionism
1:18:20
Yaakov Shapiro
Рет қаралды 68 М.
99.9% IMPOSSIBLE
00:24
STORROR
Рет қаралды 31 МЛН
Beat Ronaldo, Win $1,000,000
22:45
MrBeast
Рет қаралды 158 МЛН
Chain Game Strong ⛓️
00:21
Anwar Jibawi
Рет қаралды 41 МЛН
BAYGUYSTAN | 1 СЕРИЯ | bayGUYS
36:55
bayGUYS
Рет қаралды 1,9 МЛН
Why Fiddler On The Roof is misunderstood
31:45
yiddishkeit
Рет қаралды 249 М.
Why Japan Rejects Foreign Religions (like Christianity)
18:47
Hajichi: The Banned Traditional Tattoos of Okinawa
21:13
Unseen Japan
Рет қаралды 15 М.
Ranking Paradoxes, From Least to Most Paradoxical
25:05
Chalk Talk
Рет қаралды 84 М.
The Golem and the Jewish Superhero
38:06
Jacob Geller
Рет қаралды 1,1 МЛН
Grammar rules you can stop sticking to
23:50
RobWords
Рет қаралды 397 М.
What's Up With Okinawan Names? - A Language History
26:10
Unseen Japan
Рет қаралды 30 М.
99.9% IMPOSSIBLE
00:24
STORROR
Рет қаралды 31 МЛН