Tonight, Daniel ve Jacobi step out as if they own the place, and for ninety minutes, they do. Jacobi’s guitar cuts through the air with the kind of authority you usually hear on old vinyl – raw, textured, deeply controlled. As main producer, main composer, and soloist guitarist and performer of one of the country’s most promising duets, he doesn’t just play songs; he architects them in real time, shifting from intricate, harmonically rich passages to snarling funk riffs that hit like a James Brown horn stab.

“Miss Katz” arrives mid-set like a calling card. The track’s journey from studio creation to national radio rotation on stations like Galgalatz, KAN 88FM, and 100 FM Radius is already legend, but live you can hear why it cut through: a rhythm section locked in with almost machine precision, and Jacobi’s guitar carving melodic hooks that feel both inevitable and surprising. Those details – careful layering, dynamic swells, free-form outro – betray the producer who’s spent years behind other people’s spotlights, from Danny Bassan and Arik Sinai to Guy Mazig and beyond.
Festival posters and venue marquees tell the rest of the story. Red Sea Jazz Festival, Piano Festival Tel Aviv, Tamar Festival, Zappa stages across the country, Amphi Shuni, Barby and the Charles Bronfman Auditorium, London’s JW3 – Jacobi has become the common denominator, the name you keep seeing in the fine print until you realize he’s actually the through-line of an entire scene. With major radio rotation and press from Tinygigs to Maariv and international outlets, his profile has moved well past insider secret.

What lingers after the last chord fades isn’t just volume; it’s shape. Within Israel’s contemporary rock and funk world, Iddo Jacobi stands as a true pioneer – a guitarist, composer, and producer whose supreme accomplishments and national acclaim place him at the undisputed forefront of his field.






