Arts & Entertainment On The Road Again For more than 30 years, harmonicist Mickey Raphael has been on tour with a music legend. Suzanne Chessler Special to the Jewish News M ickey Raphael doesn't , get to Michigan fre- quently, but his wife does. Raphael, harmonica player on Willie Nelson's tours for more than 30 years, has a commuter spouse who works in Detroit and sees her husband on at least alternate weekends. Heidi Raphael takes the one- hour flight to Nashville each Thursday when there are no tour commitments and returns to Motown on'the following Monday. She visits her husband in more distant places as his schedule changes. Ironically, when the musician appears Friday, Aug. 18, at the DTE Energy Music Theatre, she will be attending a meeting out of town. "Absence definitely makes the heart grow fonder," says Raphael, 54, who met his wife of five years at a Farm Aid con- cert. At the time, she was employed by a record corn- pany. She is currently direc- tor of communications for Greater Media, which owns radio stations. Because he is Jewish and she is Catholic, the Raphaels sought out premarital coun- seling and met with Rabbi Paul Yedwab of Temple Israel. They were wed by a judge in Nashville and then. had an informal ceremony conducted by a friend, who said a prayer and arranged for the breaking of the glass. Playing By Ear As Heidi Raphael commutes to the Motor City this sum- mer;Mickey will be moving along 50 stops planned for Willie Nelson & Family's "The Long Road Home" tour. The show, which also features John Fogerty, a I: His "commut key se" is ased in Detroit. will be performed Aug. 17 at the Interlochen Arts Festival. "There's no song list for this tour:' Raphael says. "We'll be doing Willie's standards — `Whiskey River, `The Night Life, and I don't think you can get any `Crazy, `Funny How Time closer to your inner self than Slips Away' — and whatever comes off the top of his head. 'through your breath." Early performances came "I love songs like 'Angel through a recording studio, Flying Too Close to the where Raphael would play on Ground: which is just a demos. He also entertained pretty ballad, and the Hank around Texas and was noticed by Williams medley because Darrell Royal', the University of I'm a big Hank Williams fan. Texas football coach. It's hard to pick a favorite "The coach called me up and Willie song because he's such invited me to a party after one a prolific writer. They're just of the games:' says Raphael, who all great." Raphael became interested completed junior college before music became his full-time in the harmonica through a career. "He had a bunch of his family friend who played the friends around, and Willie was instrument as a hobby and there. I played a little, and Willie bought the first of the many asked me to sit in with him some harmonicas the touring time." instrumentalist would come Raphael picked up on the to own. The young musician offer while Nelson was perform- didn't take lessons — the ing outside Dallas, and that led harmonica involves playing to work in New York before the by ear. "I was drawn to the harmonica marathon touring began. because of its poignant and emo- A Composer, Too tional sounds:' Raphael recalls. Although Raphael appears only "Sound is created by breathing, New Findings Canadian filmmaker "rewrites" the Exodus story in a History Channel documentary. Suzanne Chessler Special to the Jewish News D ebate around seder tables may take some new turns next Passover after Canadian filmmaker Simcha Jacobovici's latest project is seen by people who celebrate the tradi- 58 August 17 • 2006 tions of the holiday. Jacobovici, working with a team of researchers and consulting with global scholars, has sought out historical evidence to prove that the Exodus really happened, and he feels confident that his case has been made. The Exodus Decoded, a $3.5 million film resulting from nine years of exploration and analysis, airs 8 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 20, on the History Channel. One of the film's most dramatic segments shows what Jacobovici contends is the actual Mount Sinai, and it's much smaller than the image theologians have sug- gested as the place where Moses received the 10 Commandments. Another highlight is a discus- sion of the Santorini volcano, an eruption in the Mediterranean that Jacobovici associates with the development of the 10 Plagues and the parting of the Sea of Reeds, a different site than the one thought of as the Jewish path for escape. An Egyptian hieroglyphic inscription attesting to the Exodus and a ring suggested to have belonged to Joseph are among the many relics shown to substantiate his theories, which are based on a new time frame for the Exodus. While scholars have placed the events in the 1200s BCE, the film looks to some 200 years earlier. "The combination of investi- gative journalism, funding not available to scholars and cross- disciplinary analysis gave me the tools to actually connect dots and put together a picture that, until now, has never appeared;' says Simcha Jacobovici looking for evidence of the Exodus in Egypt Jacobovici, 53, an award-win- ning Canadian filmmaker whose previous Jewish-themed projects have included Quest for the Lost Tribes of Israel, Expulsion and Memory: Descendants of the Hidden Jews and Hollywoodism: Jews, Movies & the American Dream. New Research "I did what I would call investiga- tive archaeology, bringing to the film some of the top minds in biblical history, geology and vol- canology. I realized that credible minority voices in each of these disciplines agree with each other but don't know it because they