He has played with famous names including Laurie Anderson, and L. Shankar from Shakti, Yas-Kaz, an avant-garde drummer from Japan, and has collaborated with influential eastern musicians such as Omar Faruk Tekbilek.
This insight may not be anything new, but Borochov did not stop there: Working with Bedouin musicologist Muhammad Abu Ajaj and jazz musician Omer Avital, he decided to link the pioneering songs to their sources while also infusing them with a new sound.
The result, "Debka Fantasia," reflects tremendous research, knowledge, seriousness and cultural commitment, and is also noteworthy in terms of its near-symphonic sound and emotional impact.
[2] Borochov has collaborated on a large number of theatre projects in Israel, and has taken his band to perform around the world, in the United States, Japan, Hong Kong, Berlin, Paris, Toronto and many more.
Borochov gives his musical influences to be Shakti, Oregon, Night Ark, Kardes Turkuler, Peter Gabriel, Ludwig van Beethoven, David Darling, Weather Report, New York Rock & Roll Ensemble, and Santana.