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Paul Weller's favourite kibbutznik

Indie rocker Geva Alon reveals how his ‘hard, stressful and tense’ life as an Israeli fuels his hit albums

April 28, 2010 16:45
Geva Alon met his hero Neil Young in LA. “It was shocking how friendly he was\"

ByPaul Lester, Paul Lester

2 min read

Geva Alon has been called "the Israeli Neil Young", his plaintive voice soaring above gentle acoustic guitar or the fuller sound of a band.

His newly released third album, Get Closer, was produced by Thom Monahan, who has worked with alternative folkie Devendra Banhart, Americana types such as The Jayhawks, and the grungier likes of Dinosaur Jr.

There are elements of all these artists in Alon's music, helping to make him one of Israel's most popular, and credible, acts - Get Closer is close to being awarded a gold disc. Success means big audiences - he recently played to 50,000 people in Tel Aviv's Rabin Square, where famously, during a concert by left-wing rock star Aviv Geffen in 1995, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was murdered.

Not that Alon is as politicised as Geffen. "I try not to mix music with politics," he says. "I appreciate everything that Aviv has done - he tried to change things - but that's not me. I'm just in it for the music."