Rona Kenan Explained

Rona Kenan
Background:solo_singer
Birth Date:26 July 1979
Birth Place:Jaffa, Israel
Origin:Tel Aviv
Genre:Singer-songwriter
Years Active:1990s–present
Label:NMC Music
Website:www.ronakenan.com

Rona (Aharona) Rachel Kenan (Hebrew: רונה קינן, born 26 July 1979) is an Israeli singer-songwriter.

Biography

Kenan was born on 26 July 1979. Her father is the late Amos Kenan and her mother is the scholar Nurith Gertz. She was attracted to music at a young age and learned to play the guitar. She graduated from the theater program at Thelma Yellin High School of the Arts, but preferred a musical career. At the age of eighteen she was considered a "discovery". She has cited the Beatles (particularly the song Blackbird), Leah Goldberg, The Pixies, Pina Bausch and Thelma Yellin as early influences.[1]

In 1997 she participated in a song festival called Next, organized by musician Eran Tzur, in which she recomposed and performed songs by poet Yona Wallach. She also performed in an evening commemorating Inbal Perlmutter, a young poets' event, and an evening of Leah Goldberg's poetry.[2] She played with several Israeli musicians, including Tal Gordon, Dana Berger and Asi Levi. In 1999 she and Gordon became a duo and recorded an album titled I Didn't Want It to End: Tal Gordon Hosting Rona Kenan. Kenan co-composed four of the album's songs. The album tour went on until late 2000. In 2001 she started touring solo with a show which included two instrument players beside her. She sang and promoted four songs that came out as a single. She sang mostly in English.

In 2002, she kept collecting material for her debut album and started working hard with Izhar Ashdot as producer. In 2003, she began appearing with her trio in Tel Aviv, along with multi-instrumentalist Adam Scheflan and drummer Omri Hanegbi.[2] She released three songs from the album: "Transparent Love", "To Live Right" and "Flood". In 2004, she released her debut, Breathing Down to Zero. The album included eleven original tracks in both Hebrew and English, a cover version of a Yaakov Orland song, and an instrumental track titled "Thirst and Hunger". The album featured guest appearances by Maya Dunietz, Shlomi Shaban and Berry Sakharof.[2] She said it was a challenge to write in her native language.[3] After the album's release, she entered a state of deep depression. Her health deteriorated and she had to cancel shows. Taking Ashdot's advice, she moved back with her parents to recover. They decided not to share what she was going through with almost anyone.[4]

She wrote the music for several of Israeli films and television series, including "The Cemetery Club", a documentary film directed by Tali Shemesh.[2] In 2006 she released the first single from her second album, the title song Through Foreign Eyes, and in early 2007 the second single from that album The Last Time, came out. The album came out in February. She wrote all ten songs on the album, including a duet with Gidi Gov, "Strange Dance of the Heart".[2] In 2008 she and Yoni Rechter performed renditions of two poems by author David Grossman – "End", for which Kenan wrote the music, and "At a Coffee Shop", which Rechter composed – at an afternoon honoring Grossman's latest novel at Holon's Mediatech Center.[5] She also performed in London on a boat on the Thames, re-enactment of a Maapilim boat circa 1946, during the British Mandate of Palestine.[6] In 2009 she released her third album, Shirim Leyoel ("Songs for Yoel"), a concept album inspired by her father's life story.[7] In 2013, she was part of the Asaf Avidan European tour, as guitarist and vocalist and as support band in France. In January 2014 three singles from an album named "Af Al Pil" were released, Kenan participating in two of them. In "Ha'Parpar Ve'Ha'Zahal" she sings a duet with Omer Klein; in "Ani Ve'Atsmi" she's a solo vocalist. The album was composed by Shahar Barbash and translated to Hebrew from Yiddish by Benny Mer.

In 2005 she became a "chosen artist" of the Israel Cultural Excellence Foundation.[2] She is openly gay and is considered an icon in the gay and lesbian community in Israel.[4] In 2007 she was photographed for the Israeli fashion company Comme Il Faut.[8]

Discography

Collaborations

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Rona Kenan's cultural stations. nrg. he. 4 November 2008. 2 July 2005. https://web.archive.org/web/20080523233316/http://www.nrg.co.il/online/5/ART/963/842.html. 23 May 2008. dead.
  2. Web site: Rona Kenan . IcExcellence – Israel Cultural Excellence Foundation . 15 September 2009 .
  3. News: Nir-Shalom. Nimrod. Rona Kenan getting published. Ynet. 4 November 2008. 2 January 2004. he.
  4. News: Hadar. Alon. Painful song. Haaretz. 4 November 2008. he.
  5. News: Lev-Ari. Shiri. David Grossman: I had a wish my book would protect my son Uri. Haaretz. 4 November 2008. 6 April 2008.
  6. News: Lasserson. David. Rona Kenan: Tel Aviv's lyrical dissenter. The Jewish Chronicle. 9 January 2009. 3 July 2008.
  7. News: Shalev . Ben . Songs for her father . Haaretz . 5 June 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090811083005/http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1090653.html . 11 August 2009 .
  8. News: Rona Kenan goes back to high school. Ynet. 4 November 2008. 2 May 2007. he.