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Opinion

Safe sounds of Iron Dome’s thump

Music is about humanity, about the human spirit. What we experienced was the absence of those qualities, writes James Inverne

May 13, 2021 12:54
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An Ultra orthodox jewish man walks inside a bomb shelter after it was open in the northern Israeli city of Tzfat, May 8, 2018, following an order of Tzfat mayor to open all the bomb shelters in the city. Photo by David Cohen/Flash90 *** Local Caption *** î÷ìè àéøï öôú çøãé ôåúç çøãéí ñåøéä
2 min read

I write about arts and music most of the time. When I occasionally turn to politics I usually try to relate it to music. But there is nothing musical about the sound of Iron Dome projectiles taking out rockets that are streaming towards houses and cities around you.

Thump. Thump.

When composers want to depict war it’s often through the use — the very musical use — of drums. Turns out the one who came the closest to what I heard last night was Mahler, when at the close of his Sixth Symphony he calls for the “hammer blows of fate” to be represented by an actual hammer, smashing down.

It’s not music, that moment, it’s inexorable, lifeless. It just happens. And that’s what occurred to me last night when sleep finally came at about 5am, here in Israel.