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On June 12, 2023, another teaser was released, announcing the group's debut on July 5, 2023, with their first EP Kiss of Life. [7]Beginning with "Sugarcoat" by Natty on June 18, 2023, solo music videos of "Countdown" by Belle, "Kitty Cat" by Julie, and "Play Love Games" by Haneul were released in the following days.
The song is about a melamed teaching his young students the Hebrew alphabet. By the end of the 19th century it was one of the most popular songs of the Jews of Central and Eastern Europe , and as such it is a major musical memory of pre- Holocaust Europe.
On May 12, 2023, S2 Entertainment announced that Natty would re-debut in a new 4-member girl group called Kiss of Life, which planned to debut in July. [9] On July 5, the group officially made their debut with the release of their self-titled EP. [10] On May 28, 2024, Natty featured in Jay Park's single "Taxi Blurr". [11]
Lyrically, the song focuses on the pressure to keep life picture perfect, even when the opposite is true. The Boot described the track as “sung from the point of view of someone who has that Instagram-worthy "home sweet home", but not the love that should come with it. The lyrics, which play on the verb "sugarcoat" and turn the word into a ...
According to Ya'akov Lamai, the song started out as a lower tempo song entirely in English. [3] The song was then rearranged by its four composers, together with producer Shlomo Tzach [ he ] , into an up-tempo number with a mix of mostly Hebrew lyrics with some English lyrics sprinkled in the chorus and throughout.
As there were no songs yet written for this national movement, Zionist youth movements in Germany and elsewhere published songbooks, using traditional German and other folk melodies with new words written in Hebrew. An example of this is the song that became Israel's national anthem, "Hatikvah". [25] The words, by the Hebrew poet Naftali Herz ...
Hava Nagila" (Hebrew: הָבָה נָגִילָה, Hāvā Nāgīlā, "Let us rejoice") is a Jewish folk song. It is traditionally sung at celebrations, such as weddings , Bar and bat mitzvahs , and other Jewish holidays among the Jewish community.
The usual modern pronunciation of this word is , while a transcription of the Biblical and Mishnaic pronunciation would have likely been [ħai̯] (with a pharyngeal consonant). In Hebrew, the related word chaya (חיה ) means "living thing" or "animal", and is derived from the Hebrew word chai (חי ), meaning "alive".