Some nights, a bouzouki cuts through the kick drum, clear and played live. That detail anchors the live set from Zehavi (Sagi Zehavi), an electronic artist who grew up sharing one crowded room in an impoverished neighborhood and found his early momentum busking on that same instrument. 

His music blends club energy with Mediterranean and Middle Eastern phrasing, built for rooms where strangers turn to face the stage. If that mix lands, a festival crowd could discover a sound that carries both grit and lift. 

Hard starts shaped Zehavi. He learned bouzouki at thirteen, then played on the streets and in bars to cover rent and keep going. Years later, that practice meets club electronics, with lines that carry Mediterranean phrases sliding across kicks and synths. It’s a blend born from necessity rather than trend watching. 

The focus stays on feeling and motion. Hooks lift from the bouzouki, while beats frame an electronic, folk-tinged music palette without swallowing the melody. On tracks and in sets, Zehavi leans on call-and-response phrases that echo folk dance patterns, so even first-time listeners can feel where the drop might hit.

The path forward looks deliberately global. He’s played in France, Greece, and Cyprus, with dates across the Middle East, growing through steady shows. Clips from 2023 turned heads online, and the music has continued to hit multiple milestones that could help secure bigger festival slots.

Live, the set favors connection over polish. He brings the bouzouki to the front, then moves between electronics and strings without losing the pulse. That mix of precision and looseness invites crowds to join in, whether it’s a call sung in unison or a melody lifted by hands near the rail. It feels human and immediate. 

Studio habits mirror the live intent. He writes on the bouzouki first, then builds beats that leave space for the instrument to breathe. When collaborators step in, they tend to meet him halfway, adding texture or percussion without sanding down the bright, metallic edge that lets the melody cut through. The result keeps its bite.

The story under the sound matters. He talks about survival, recovery, and second chances, and invites crowds to add their own meaning. That theme threads through appearances in large arenas and small clubs, and it could carry him to a main stage dream like Tomorrowland.

Zehavi speaks openly about poverty and addiction, and how rebuilding gave the performances their current weight. When thousands sing back a riff, he treats it like proof that beginnings can turn into shared energy, a reminder that a set can carry more than entertainment. 

Credit: Niv Mayo

Crowds are a large part of how Zehavi approaches each set. He watches which phrases travel, then trims or extends sections to match the room in real time. That responsiveness may be why early supporters keep turning. The same song can land as a tight four-minute surge one night and a patient, soaring closer another, rewarding repeat listeners.

That’s the promise of music at its best. The show could send you home humming, which is often enough for a while.

SPIN Magazine newsroom and editorial staff were not involved in the creation of this content.

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