"Israel" | |
---|---|
![]() Official single cover for "Israel" (1972) | |
Single by Bee Gees | |
from the album Trafalgar | |
B-side | "Dearest" |
Released | May 1972 (Belgium)[1][deprecated source] |
Recorded | 7 April 1971 |
Genre | Pop[2] |
Length | 3:54 |
Label | Polydor Atco (United States/Canada) |
Songwriter(s) | Barry Gibb |
Producer(s) | Robert Stigwood, Bee Gees |
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leer más
1972 single by Bee Gees
"Israel" is a ballad track[3] written by Barry Gibb. It appeared on the Bee Gees` 1971 album, Trafalgar.
It was recorded on 7 April 1971 at the IBC Studios in London, along with the two Maurice Gibb compositions, "Trafalgar" and "It`s Just the Way", the Robin Gibb composition "Engines, Aeroplanes", and another Barry Gibb composition, the ballad "Don`t Wanna Live Inside Myself".[3]
"Israel" was released as a single in May 1972 in Belgium,[4] in the Netherlands, where it reached No. 22, and in New Zealand. "Dearest" was chosen as the B-side.[1][deprecated source]
While the exact meaning of the song is unknown, Seth Rogovoy interpreted it for The Forward as a "love song to Israel", noting that Gibb played it onstage during a trip to Israel in 1972.[5]
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1972 single by Bee Gees
"Israel" is a ballad track[3] written by Barry Gibb. It appeared on the Bee Gees` 1971 album, Trafalgar.
It was recorded on 7 April 1971 at the IBC Studios in London, along with the two Maurice Gibb compositions, "Trafalgar" and "It`s Just the Way", the Robin Gibb composition "Engines, Aeroplanes", and another Barry Gibb composition, the ballad "Don`t Wanna Live Inside Myself".[3]
"Israel" was released as a single in May 1972 in Belgium,[4] in the Netherlands, where it reached No. 22, and in New Zealand. "Dearest" was chosen as the B-side.[1][deprecated source]
While the exact meaning of the song is unknown, Seth Rogovoy interpreted it for The Forward as a "love song to Israel", noting that Gibb played it onstage during a trip to Israel in 1972.[5]