Na'ama

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Hebrew: נעמה (girl's name, from נעים "lovely"). Partner dances by various choreographers.

Several partner dances are recorded with name Na'ama: by Moti Alfassy 1981, by Bentzi Tiram 1983, by Marco Ben-Shimon 1984 or 1985 (sources differ), by Peri Shachaf 1992. At least Marco's and Bentzi's, and probably Moti's, are all set to the same song, with music by Shlomo Biderman, lyrics by Avraham Bar Oz (who also wrote the lyrics of Debkat HaShalom and Al Gemali), and arrangement by Shimon Cohen. (There exist sources that specify a different song for Moti's dance; the song for Peri's dance is not recorded.)

Of these, Marco's dance is by far the most popular.

Although the dances date from the early '80s and later, the song is considerably older. It won second prize at the 1961 Israeli Song Festival, sung by Esther Ofarim, who also sang the first prize winner at that Festival, Sa'eni Imcha. Na'ama has been recorded by several artists; the version commonly used for dancing is sung by Ofra Haza.

Na'ama at israelidances.com, Marco's version

Video at Rokdim, also Marco's version
Na'ama All four versions at israelidances.com
Na'ama Three versions at Rokdim