Saturday, April 29, 2006

Keeping it kosher

FIONA SHEPHERD

"WHEN THE JEWS WERE SLAVES IN EGYPT, THERE was three things that they held on to, and one of the things was their Jewish name. The name in Hebrew letters has a really deep meaning. We believe that God created the world with those letters and his speech is in those letters."

There are many things one might expect to hear from the mouth of a rising rap star, but expounding the sanctity of the Hebrew alphabet is an unusual opening gambit. Yet, in explaining the adoption of his orthodox Jewish name, Hasidic rapper Matisyahu is simply establishing his street credentials like any other young contender, even if his message, look and culture are far from the hip-hop norm.

This New York-based rapper, born 26 years ago as Matthew Miller, is a tall, striking presence in his Hasidic garb and traditional full beard, but his imposing image contrasts with the accessibility of his music. His excellent new album Youth, due out next month in the UK, seamlessly blends Hasidic melodic tradition and Hebrew psalms with roots reggae rhythms. It went straight into the Billboard top ten in its first week of release in the US, where he has built up a hefty mainstream following over the last two years as a skilled musician and an advocate for his faith.

"I think most Jews in America are very disassociated and disconnected from their roots and what it even means to be Jewish," he says. "Being a person that was into searching for spirituality and looking into myself, I decided to start with my own life roots and my own culture and the more I learned, the more I took on."

The title track of Youth - and also its first single - is a motivational message to his younger self, which was inspired by his teenage search for meaning. Matisyahu dropped out of his strict Hebrew school in his teens and drifted for years, busking around the States with a djembe drum in tow. "I would play the drum and make up rap stuff about the scenery and the people," he recalls. While attending a wilderness school in Oregon, he played open mic sessions in coffee shops and with a band whose experimentations would lead to his idiosyncratic blend of hip-hop, rock and his beloved reggae.

He first heard Bob Marley when he was 14, and although it would be years before he found his way to a practising faith, reggae music provided a stepping stone. "I really connected with all the Jewish imagery - the lion of Judah, the Zion train," he says. "You can name any Bob Marley song and pull direct quotes from the Torah. These were things I was hearing my whole life but they didn't make much sense to me, and then hearing Marley's music made all those things come alive to me. I intuitively saw that there was some part of myself in that music which is connected very deeply to the Torah, that being the building block of the entire Jewish faith."

Matisyahu grew up in White Plains, NY, and it was back in New York where he finally committed to a strict Jewish faith, adopting the tenets of the ultra-orthodox Chabad-Lubavitch lifestyle, through which adherents seek to connect more deeply with their traditional Jewish roots, and settling in the Lubavitch community in Crown Heights, Brooklyn - not your average 'hood for not-your-average rapper.

"My lifestyle in general is a lot different from that of a rapper. On an ideal morning I go to the ritual bath, which is a purifying pool of water men come to dip in. Then I spend a couple of hours praying and meditating and, if I'm in a community like Crown Heights, it's usually in the synagogue. So you'll have different groups of ten men praying together. At the same time, there will be little kids running around and people of all ages learning the Torah, and that's done pretty loudly.

"And in the same room there will be people dancing in a circle waving yellow flags and there will be some homeless guys because they don't kick people out. It's like this stew of chaos."

These days, though, the chaos of the synagogue is more often replaced by the upheaval of touring. Matisyahu's band hail from different faith backgrounds, so when it comes to living a kosher existence on tour, he is obliged to improvise. "When I'm on the road I'm careful about where I get my food," he says. "I pray either on the tour bus or in my hotel room by myself, and instead of going in the ritual pool I'll jump in the hotel pool or make the tour bus pull over at a lake and jump in the lake. So I have to be creative and find my own ways to do it. But Judaism allows for that. There's the ideal and there's what you do if you can't do the ideal."

There are other more fundamental social barriers created by the demands of his orthodoxy, which he must address as a performer in a somewhat, shall we say, tactile genre. "There's that clash which everyone always mentions about not touching women," he says. "We reserve touch for only those special moments between a man and his wife. So that's obviously something that can be a little complicated with things like stage-diving and even social norms like shaking hands. But besides that, it's just really normal to me."

Matisyahu celebrates this piety on album track Unique Is My Dove, which blends the doe-eyed devotion of a conventional love song with pledges of religious observance: "Dedicated to a life bigger than you or me, build a temple in our hearts for his majesty, stay simple, serve God, and keep our deeds clean." As an insight into a rapper's domestic life, it is leagues away from Eminem's fraught epistles to wife Kim and daughter Hailie.

As is the norm in the Lubavitch culture, Matisyahu married relatively young and has a baby son, Levi, who cries almost constantly in the background throughout our chat. As his wife, Tahli, is praying, she is not permitted to talk, so she signs for Matisyahu to get a dummy. That's certainly one way of reconciling his faith, family and work duties. Another was leaving a Passover gift of unleavened bread for staff at Sony's New York HQ - bread that is not puffed up with air being a symbol of humility in an ego-fuelled industry.

Matisyahu may be a novelty in the mainstream music business, but he is part of a burgeoning crossover scene of young orthodox Jewish musicians for whom "music is the quill of the soul". Some of the more Kabbalistic lyrical references on Youth will not be clear to non-Jews, but the album's central theme of breaking out of slavery is a familiar one in reggae traditions. Given the hardline Lubavitch stance on Israel, which makes no concessions to Palestinians, it is tempting to ascribe political zeal to titles such as Dispatch the Troops and What I'm Fighting For. But Matisyahu's lyrics call for reflection - and he even has an instrumental entitled Shalom/Saalam ("peace" in Hebrew and Arabic).

"There is an element there of something which is political, but I see it as more holistic," he says. " It's just a part of being Jewish, the deep connection with the land of Israel which the rest of the world would see as political but I just see as very intuitive. I live Judaism to its fullest. A lot of Jews are not necessarily showing themselves as Jews to the world. I am, so it's a big responsibility - not that everyone has to like you, but to try and represent Judaism in the most pure and positive way possible."

When Matisyahu makes his first foray to the UK at the end of May, he will perform for Glasgow's Jewish community in Newton Mearns, before casting his net to music fans more widely. His purpose is not to proselytise, but to touch people - in a ritually clean manner, naturally. "When I started in America, the core group of fans was Jewish. Certainly a lot of Jewish people feel that for once there's someone who represents their Jewishness and their culture, but now it's mainly non-Jews at my concerts. We're excited at becoming international and seeing how different people react to it. The music is for everybody - that's the way I feel."

• Youth is released by Columbia on 8 May.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Chabad Passover Interview

An exclusive interview with the Hassidic reggae superstar

Music superstar Matisyahu will celebrate the Passover seders (April 12-13) at one of the USA’s 85 Chabad-Lubavitch college campus centers.

Rabbi and Mrs. Simcha and Tzirel Levenberg, program directors of the Chabad House at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, will welcome Matisyahu, his wife Tahli and their baby Laivy to their Chabad House this coming Wednesday. Levenberg described the Jewish student body at Amherst as "absolutely thrilled that Matis is coming to the seder at Chabad House. The entire campus is buzzing with excitement."

We caught up with Matisyahu yesterday, and probed him for his thoughts about Passover and for the reason behind his Passover choice.

Chabad.org: What can you tell us about your Passover seder?
This slavery is what keeps people from delving deeply into themselves

Matisyahu: My earliest memories of a Passover seder involve my grandfather, who was a tall athletic man, a basketball player. We got a great kick out of "stealing" his afikoman. The fact that we were actually able to outsmart him and find the matzah he hid was a real thrill. And, to top it off, he was generous with his prizes...!

Today, on one level, Passover is a pretty difficult holiday for me. I mean, beyond the neurosis of having to clean the house like crazy, you then sit at the seder and practically stuff matzah down your throat until the point of explosion (laughs). I mean, it's not particularly easy...

Chabad.org: So is that all? Clean till you drop and stuff yourself silly?

Matisyahu: Well, no. By no means. Passover is all about breaking out of our constraints, attaining personal freedom. Each of us is enslaved inwardly in some way or another and Passover helps us break out of our personal slavery and become free. Doing things that are beyond our comfort zone, pushing our limits for the sake of a higher purpose, a higher calling, actually liberates us.

The Lubavitcher Rebbe once pointed out that Howard Hughes was actually the most shackled, the most enslaved person. The more he amassed in the material world, the more lonely and paranoid he became. He died pitifully.

True freedom is a state of being. Accepting a Higher Being is actually liberating.

Chabad.org: How, in your opinion, does one attain personal freedom?

Matisyahu: Well, for me, introspection and meditation is integral. Chassidic philosophy places high value on both and offers amazing mind and heart methodologies for each. Lots of prayer and Chasidic meditation really helps me focus.

Chabad.org: And how do you remain conscious of this freedom?

Matisyahu: I continue to study Torah daily, with particular emphasis on Chasidic discourses. Especially before holidays. It helps make the rituals and practices more real and integrated into what I am experiencing in the here and now. Both my wife, Tahli, and I try to learn as much as possible. It keeps us grounded and focused on what is important.

Chabad.org: How does this impact your music?

Matisyahu: All of my songs are influenced and inspired by the teachings that inspire me. I want my music to have meaning, to be able to touch people and make them think. Chasidism teaches that music is "the quill of the soul." Music taps into a very deep place and speaks to us in a way that regular words can't. Breaking out of slavery is definitely a theme in my music:

You're a slave to yourself and you don't even know…if your cup's already full then it is bound to overflow

I think this is a concept many people don't recognize. We think of slavery as someone else enslaving us, but in truth, we are often the ones enslaving ourselves. We are so busy being influenced by money, by society, by external pressures, that our true identity and abilities can be hidden.
"This is the humble man's bread!"

It is this slavery that keeps people caught up in "Egypt," in the false safety net of their lives, in their external distractions, and it keeps people from going into the wilderness of their souls, from delving deeply into themselves.

It is only when we realize what we have within, that we can act from the inside out instead of the outside in.

Chabad.org: Speaking about matzah and music. We were originally scheduled to talk on Friday but you got busy at Sony. What happened there?

Matisyahu: I was finishing morning prayers and saw a group of guys getting ready to distribute matzahs in Manhattan, and I kind of got nostalgic. It reminded me of when I was learning in yeshiva a couple of years ago and would go to hand out matzahs or menorahs or whatever was relevant to that holiday.

So on a whim I bought a bunch of boxes and headed to Sony headquarters in the city to share the experience of the hand-baked matzah with some friends.

Some of them were deeply touched, others had already left for the weekend. I left the matzah with others at Sony to pass on.

This is actually a perfect symbol for what we're talking about.

While bread is filled with air, representing ego, Matzah is flat, representing humility. You know, so much of the music industry is about inflating the ego to the point where it becomes an idol. Where you become an idol.

The message I am trying to convey is to chop down that ego, to chop down the machine that controls so many, and to bring a message of humility and holiness to the world. I want to help others recognize their potential within and their ability to break out of their boundaries, their constraints.

I brought the matzahs, the flat, egoless bread to Sony -- and Sony is distributing it for me.

I left a note for each person I missed saying, "This is the humble man's bread!"

Chabad.org: Okay, so the seder night comes around and while the matzah expands your intestines your mind is focused on liberation and humility. This can be done anywhere, can it not?

Matisyahu: Well, yes, technically it can. But it's important to have the right environment. If for whatever reason the environment is not available to you, you have to go create it. But one can hardly discount environment.

Chabad.org: And your choice of environment this year?

Matisyahu: We are going to join Rabbi Simcha and Tzirel Levenberg, and 150-200 of their student guests, at the campus Chabad House in Amherst.They are such awesome, fun, down-to-earth and kind-hearted people, not to mention, two of our closest friends.

Chabad.org: But why not something more plush like a hotel or something? Surely some other friends would like to come along...
I am trying to bring a message of humility and holiness to the world

Matisyahu: Celebrating holidays at a Chabad House was a big part of my own spiritual growth. For a few years I was the one at the table coming for inspiration and a deeper understanding of my heritage. I often repeat how Rabbi Korn at NYU was integral to my growth as a Jew.

For this holiday Tahli and I felt that it would be really nice to go back into the Chabad on Campus environment and share our own experiences with the students and learn from their own struggles and their own search.

Chabad.org: What do you expect to share with a roomful of students?

Matisyahu: First of all, I already share a very close affinity to the students in that room.

It wasn't long ago that I was in college, and just searching for meaning, searching for something real. I wasn't into following the mainstream and going with the flow; I knew I had to find something that was real, that had meaning, that had relevance.

I think the college years are a time when so many students are trying to liberate themselves from their environment, from the "machine" that surrounds them. They know something is off but they don't always know where to go or what they are even looking for.

That’s why I appreciate the Chabad Houses on campus so much. Whenever I visit a campus Chabad House I find a place where students can come and ask questions, get answers, and see a different way to look at life.

Chabad.org:And where did your Chabad House experience take you?

Matisyahu: You know, I was always searching. I always felt intuitively that everything we were experiencing in this physical world had to have a deeper counterpart, emotionally, spiritually, and so on. Chabad House introduced me to Torah in general and especially, for me, to Chasidic philosophy. When I started learning everything finally clicked. Finally there was validation that this world was not random, that everything connected in a seamless manner, even though it does not always appear that way.

At Amherst's Campus Chabad House I'll try to share some of what I learned, some of what this Festival of Liberation means to me.

Another great thing is that Tali will be teaching the students as well. At many of the places we've been, especially on campus, Tali does some teaching. There are just so many issues and stereotypes that people have about Judaism, particularly regarding a woman's role within Judaism, and when Tali is able to speak to people and address their concerns, it is incredible to watch how people open up and want to learn.

Chabad.org: So in some ways it sounds like your Passover experience will be a mixture of similar events or things.

Matisyahu: Yes, that's definitely a great way to sum it up.

The choice to go to the Chabad House for seders was a no-brainer, as it is actually a convergence of interests and passions.

There is the search of the youth, the sincerity of the student's quest, which is deeply a part of me, to which I can totally relate and very much want to help.

And there is the message of Pesach which is all about breaking out of our constraints and being liberated.

And it is all taking place at a Chabad House where these ideals are learned and lived 24 hours a day.

What more could we possibly ask for?

Chabad.org: Well, it sounds like you're pretty clear about your priorities.

Matisyahu: You know, just last night I had an experience that put everything into perspective for me. We can get so caught up in our own lives that we lose sight of the bigger picture. Last night I was asked to visit an 18 year old kid who is suffering in the hospital from a terrible disease. It was his "last wish" for me to visit him, though I pray to dance at his wedding one day. When I got there, the first thing he asked me was to tell him a story about the Rebbe. This kid is Jewish, but he's not from a Lubavitch family or anything, but that was the first thing he wanted from me. It was so powerful. Because it was really the Rebbe's teachings that transformed my life.

So I told him some stories and realized that it was the anniversary of the Rebbe's birthday that night. And I felt good, really good, feeling that I was making the Rebbe happy. I so wish I had known him and met him, but here I was doing exactly what he lived for, what I think he'd wanted me to be doing, being there and speaking to that boy.

In that sense what happened was really liberating. Like a taste of Passover before Passover.

You know, when you focus on another there is just no room for yourself, for your own ego. He may have thought I was doing him a favor by coming, but he was really the one doing me the favor.

Chabad.org: Any parting words?

Matisyahu: Just want to wish everyone a great Passover. May we all find personal and universal freedom! Peace.

Saturday, April 22, 2006

The JewniProj at UCSC: Matisyahu Update

I was asked a number of times during the seders where Matisyahu was spending Pesach. Well, as reported by Esther on Jewlicious.com, he was apparently at the Chabad House at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst (indeed, he turned down the invitation from Madonna to attend her Kabbala seder). You can click here for an interview from Chabad.org with Matis about Pesach. It's been a good while since we've had a lengthy Matisyahu post, so here you go.

Some of our readers may not be aware that it's been somewhat of a rough ride for Matisyahu in recent months. He was accused of being a back-stabbing, self-glorifying, shomer negiah woman-hating, Black-culture appropriating Yachinik. And quite a number of people have plainly said that they think his new album sucks. And they've already started looking for the next Chassidic musical sensation.

But around here, I like to think that we're a little more open-minded than most people. And I think we have a little more love for Matis than all those critics. Afterall, when is the last time that an observant Jew has held such a prominent place in pop culture in North America? Um, never.

I'm sure you've all read the bios. He grew up secular, went to Israel when he was a teenager, also became a deadhead around the same time. Got into drugs and music, Phish, reggae. Then he found Torah, the truth that he had been seeking but never found in drugs. Now he's happily married and has a son, and is part of the Chabad-Lubavitch sect of Chassidism. His lyrics often overtly reflect themes from the central Chassidic work of the Chabad movement, composed by the Alte Rebbe, known as the Tanya.

It's well known that his music has been well received. I live near Barson Street, the ghetto of Santa Cruz (galus of galus), and people have driven by my house blasting Matisyahu. Well, as pop-culture would have it, people are already selling (and buying) not only t-shirts emblazoned with Matisyahu's face, but also kippah's with Matisyahu on them. You can even download Matis ringtones to your celly.

Here are a few sweet video clips that you may have missed, compliments of AOL Sessions: Beatbox and Ancient Lullabye.

Here's a pretty sweet interview. And here is a very special clip, passed along to me by Fedora Black, of a homevid from Matisyahu's yeshiva, Hadar HaTorah: click here.

2 Comments:

Mobius said...

ah yes; we at jewschool are everso closed minded. we were only matis' first boosters who reported on him every step of the way until he screwed jdub over.

in the meantime, even pey dalid will tell you that y-love wipes the floor with matis lyrically. i hung out with them and y-love together on the midrachov a few months ago, and one of their entourage went off about y-love being the greatest living jewish mc. after seeing him in action, i can't but help agree.

Mon Apr 17, 01:20:08 AM 2006
G-D SQUAD said...

Mobius, don't worry, I definitely wasn't implying that Jewschool is close-minded. I know you guys used to love him.

I was mainly referring to the likes of Edwin Decker, Kelefa Sanneh, and Jody Rosen.

Also, I don't doubt that Y-Love is the most talented Jewish MC alive.

I don't know if you'll actually end up reading this, but I was at the first meeting of Corner Prophets in January of 2005. In fact, I think Kitra Cahana ended up coming eventually only because I told her how sick it was. Keep it up.

Mon Apr 17, 01:51:18 AM 2006

Friday, April 21, 2006

Matisyahu thread

Far from what you'd call your typical dancehall artist, Hasidic reggae singer Matisyahu is turning up the heat in the rock world, garnering praise and attention from the most unexpected of places. A member of the Chabad Lubavitch sect of Hasidic Judaism, he has the look of your typical Orthodox Brooklynite, but when he steps to the mic, his abilities prove him anything but average.

The Associated Press writes,

Sojourns: Judaism as Style

I've found myself listening to the much-hyped, Hasidic reggae/hip-hop artist Matisyahu the last couple days. Needless to say, that makes me a confirmed bandwagon jumper. The live recording of "King without a Crown" and the accompanying video shot in Austin TX have been getting heavy rotation. His new CD is due next week and already two shows have been sold out at Manhattan's sizable Hammerstein Ballroom. Writing this column, I merely join the rubes finally noticing a sub-cultural phenomenon as it percolates up to the mainstream.

Let me say at the outset that I am no aficionado of dancehall or reggae. But for what it's worth, it does seem to me that the rhythms of toasting and the syncopations of Jewish prayer and song go well together (biddi-bum, biddi-diddi-bum, sounds equally appropriate for Marley or Tevya). And I like the easy translations Matisyahu has made from Jah to Hashem while incorporating elements of Torah, the Psalms, and the like. Still, I don't really know enough about music to do anything other than listen to it, and so I'll leave the discussion of the songs to those who can write about them with some expertise. What interests me here instead is the phenomenon of Matisyahu himself. At first glance, he has every appearance of a novelty act, an amusing suturing of Lubovitcher Judaism with West-Indian dancehall. Use whatever metaphor you would like. He's a jerk pastrami sandwich, Vanilla Ice made from Manishevitz. Except that he's not. Read over his fawning press, and you'll see that he's survived the inevitable skepticism. Indeed, the verdict has come in on the opposite side. Matisyahu is an authentic fusion of two distinct musical, ethnic, and religious cultures: Jewish and West Indian, matzo and roti. He's a one man, cross-pollinated product of Crown-Heights Brooklyn.

OK, so in other words, one myth has taken the place of another. We are to imagine a yeshiva boy who cut class to run across Flatbush Avenue and spend afternoons spinning and toasting with the boys from the Islands. But that isn't exactly right either. As is usually the case, the truth is more complicated and more interesting. Matisyahu was born Matthew Miller to a middle-class secular family in West Chester Pennsylvania. Late in his teens, he found God and decided to become Orthodox while staring deeply at the mountains during a camping trip in Colorado. He subsequently enrolled in a Hasidic yeshiva designed especially for converts to Orthodoxy. The young Matthew Miller seems to have had a wide interest in music, but his interest in the particular religious culture of Jewish Hasidism, with its messianic mysticism, its separatist resistance to modern living, and in the particular, Lubavitch sect he joined, its commitment to the charismatic authority of the late Rabbi Menachem Scheerson, was rather late in coming. It is not right to say that he was Hasidic and then found reggae. Rather, the two seem to have fed off each other in a wholesale reconfiguring of his life.

What is interesting about this, I think, is that the intensely religious and observant Judaism that so marks the persona of Matisyahu was something that he chose, not something he was born into. The beard and the side curls, the long black coats and felt hats, the tsitsis and the like, are self-conscious stylings. They are a Hasidic aesthetic, or Hastheatic, if you will. I do not mean to disparage at all the sincerity of Matisyahu's beliefs. His commitment to the messianic religiosity of Lubovitcher Hasidism is evident in his lyrics and in his life. Even so, the religious persona is clearly as much a question of style as it is of belief. The more so, I would imagine, for his audience. There is something intrinsically appealing about seeing a Hasid perform his kind of music and perform it well. Matisyahu's Judaism is interesting because it is so visible and marked, so much like the inner city of a mythical old-world. When it is fused with the musical style of his West-Indian neighbors, it is clearly updated to our polyglot and hybrid moment.

Matisyahu's sudden popularity is owing in part to the role he has taken within a larger resurgence of hipster Judaism in popular culture, a fascination with Yiddishkeit and klezmer and Bar-Mitzvah-Disco and the like. As it has long been, Judaism is here a sign of urbanity, of knowingness, and of cosmopolitanism. But in this case the urbanity and knowingness and cosmopolitanism dwell in the musical hybridity: the nexus of Hasidism, reggae, and hip-hop as distinct urban forms. Thus I suspect that few of Matisyahu's listeners are drawn to the religious content of his music, important as that content may be to him. Whether they know it or not, they are drawn to the familiar unity of Judaism and modernity, the ineffably current and relevant something that resonates in the sound of the Yiddish or the Hebrew, the look of the side curls and the tsitsis, when they are combined and overlaid with an unexpected kind of music. So, while there is little in Hasidism one can relate to as doctrine, and even less as a way of life, there is something clearly attractive about it as a contemporary style. So much so that the fusion with reggae and dancehall and hip hop seems not so implausible, and not at all kitsch. Given the alternatives, that is not so bad a use for religion.

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

more live journal

"youth" is such a good fucking cd. my goodness. matisyahu is fucking awesome. i'd like to meet him, altho, he wouldn't be able to interact with me. lol.

LiveJounal.......

so tonight i'm having passover seder with Matisyahu. yes, that's fucking right, i'm going to eat and smoke hooka with Matisyahu.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Hasidic Rapper Matisyahu at head of growing hipster Judiasm movement

Adam Sandler may have gotten things rolling with his "Hanukkah Song," but now a rocker and a TV host rabbi are making it cool to be a Jew

COX NEWS SERVICE
p>His act has been likened to a "Saturday Night Live" skit: Picture a Hasidic Jew, garbed in traditional black attire, jumping around on a concert stage as if he's some strange amalgam of Mick Jagger, Little Richard and your latest rap- and reggae-influenced rock star.

In this case, he is your latest rock star: Meet Matisyahu, an Orthodox Jew whose new album, "Youth," was in the top 10 on the Billboard album chart before dipping to No. 17 on Thursday.

But Matisyahu is hardly an isolated phenomenon. Take a look at pop culture these days and "hipster Judaism," as the phenomenon has been dubbed, is just about everywhere.

It's on television: Consider the new show coming to cable's Learning Channel, "Shalom in the Home," starring Shmuley Boteach, an Orthodox rabbi who counsels troubled families. Think Dr. Phil with a Yiddish accent.

It's in the bookstore: Consider two popular tomes from last year: Abigail Pogrebin's Stars of David, a look at Jewish actors, writers, politicians and other celebrities, from Sarah Jessica Parker to Larry King, and Bar Mitzvah Disco, a celebration of the Jewish rite of passage in all its campy excessiveness.

It's at the clothing store: Consider the cleverly designed T-shirts that declare, "Moses is my homeboy" or that ask, "Who's your rabbi?" Even the trendy clothier Urban Outfitters has gotten into the act with its "Everyone Loves a Jewish Girl" tees.

And it's at the record store, beyond Matisyahu, that is: Consider the Jewish-oriented label JDub Records, which not only put Matisyahu on the map, but also has a roster that includes the LeeVees, the band behind the recent "Hanukkah Rocks" album.

The phenomenon is so big that it even has its own publication, Heeb magazine, otherwise known as "The New Jew Review." Its latest issue is dubbed the "Sex Issue" and features a cover profile of Jewish comedic siren Sarah Silverman.

In other words, this isn't your bubbe's Judaism, heavy on the gefilte fish and the stern rabbinical scholars.

In many ways, this marriage of Judaism and pop culture has been set in motion for at least a decade. In some cases, it came from within the Jewish community.

When Adam Sandler introduced his now classic "Hanukkah Song," a paean to all things (and all people) Jewish, on "Saturday Night Live" in 1994, he created a kind of template. A sample lyric: "David Lee Roth lights the menorah / So do James Caan, Kirk Douglas and the late Dinah Shore-ah."

But you can't overlook the role of non-Jews in bringing Judaism to the mainstream.


Madonna led the way with her embrace of Kaballah, a form of Jewish mysticism. But she's since been joined by the likes of Demi Moore and Paris Hilton. Britney Spears even has Hebrew letters tattooed on the back of her neck.

Ultimately, however, the boom in hipster Judaism speaks to the mind-set of Jews in a postassimilation era. For much of the 20th century, Jews strived to fit into a non-Jewish world, keeping their faith and ethnicity a private matter. Jews in Hollywood, for example, routinely changed their names: Kirk Douglas was formerly known as Issur Danielovich Demsky.

But there comes a point when the pendulum must swing the other way. Now that Jews have found a level of acceptance in an increasingly multicultural American society, it's OK for them to express, well, their Jewishness.

"We're not scared," says Aaron Bisman, founder of JDub Records. And increasingly, the expression takes on a certain hipster tone in keeping with the mind-set of contemporary culture.

"I'd say making fun of things is what my generation does ... We need a hobby, so it's mockery," says Rob Tannenbaum, music editor of Blender magazine. Tannenbaum is a leader of the hipster Judaism movement in his role as a member of the comedic musical duo What I Like About Jew and as a creator of the VH1 special, "So Jewtastic," which aired at the end of last year.

The mockery speaks to the very secular aspect of this trend: Judaism may be a religion, but it's also a culture. And though American Jews increasingly have felt a certain distance when it comes to matters of faith, they still want a connection of some sort.

And it's why some Jewish philanthropic organizations have eagerly funded this hipster version of outreach.

"Young people will go to a concert before they'll go to a synagogue," says Felicia Herman, executive director of the Natan Fund, which has given out nearly $2 million to about 30 nonmainstream Jewish organizations, including JDub Records and Heeb magazine.

Which is not to say that religion doesn't play a role in all of this. Even traditional-minded Jewish leaders will look past the more controversial aspects of the movement -- Heeb magazine, for example, takes its name from a pejorative term for Jews, albeit in an effort to reclaim it as a positive -- and will see the overall effort as a bridge to building the faith.

"I think it's a great doorway," says Rabbi Moshe Scheiner of Palm Beach Orthodox Synagogue in Florida.

And the significance of Matisyahu can't be underestimated. He may be a bona-fide pop star who sings in a patois that's reminiscent of Bob Marley, but he's also a man of faith who embraced Orthodoxy after growing up in a mostly secular suburban Jewish household.

Matisyahu won't perform on the Sabbath in keeping with the dictates of Jewish law. He requires that kosher food be made available at his shows. And he speaks of his religious fervor in nearly every verse of his lyrics. To quote "King Without a Crown": "I sing to my God songs of love and healing."


The message is one that seems to speak to the times, whether you're a Jew who's suddenly rediscovered the faith or whether you're an outsider a la Madonna.

Rabbi Boteach, who first found pop-culture fame as the author of Kosher Sex, argues that Judaism has become hip for an altogether different reason than the sardonic secularism would suggest. Rather, it's the faith itself, which places an earthly emphasis on the here and now and "mastering your life," that's winning fans.

In that sense, Boteach sees parallels with how spiritual seekers of a previous generation -- the baby boomers -- turned to Eastern religion.

Judaism is "the Buddhism of our times," says Boteach.

There's also a case to be made that Judaism has always taken inspiration from contemporary society. Judaic scholar Frederick Greenspahn of Florida Atlantic University points to the fact that one Jewish prayer is based on a melody from a centuries-old German beer-drinking song.

J.J. Goldberg, editor of the Jewish Forward publication, says the tradition goes back further. "Jews have been drawing from the popular culture around them since Roman times," he says.

And what's happening today with Judaism is perhaps no different from what already has happened with Christianity. Long before there was Matisyahu, there was the rise of Christian rock. If anything, some might argue that Jews are borrowing from the same playbook, finding ways to make their faith and culture relevant.

But what if the plan backfires?

Despite all the hoopla, hipster Judaism may do little in terms of bolstering synagogue attendance -- or even Jewish identity.

In author Pogrebin's Stars of David book, she gives voice to such concern through Leon Wieseltier, the fiction editor of The New Republic and an outspoken crusader for what he calls Jewish "competence."

"He derides a kind of Jewish identity that might be described as Judaism Lite ... In other words, Jews who 'feel' Jewish because of a tune they remember, a cheese blintz or a visit to shul twice a year," Pogrebin writes.

But it's possible that hipster Judaism may be the beginning of an altogether new way of expressing Judaism, Goldberg argues, one that allows for secular and religious modes alike.

Matisyahu at the top of underground

By Samantha Powers
TEEN PAGE REPORTER


• Matisyahu, Youth, Sony. 3.5 (out of four)

Matisyahu may not receive much airtime on the radio, but he is an underground sensation who deserves the limelight for his brilliant blurring of genres and distinctive ideas.

On his third album, Youth, Matisyahu is a beautiful contradiction, a man who combines the Jewish faith with reggae and hip-hop music. His mixture of reggae, poetry and spirituality challenges listeners to re-examine their own standards. The music draws you in with its cool, laid-back style, almost obscuring the profound meaning of the words. Matisyahu has a broad underground following, attracting Jews, hippies, rap fans and others, who share in his message of love and peace.

Matthew Miller became Matisyahu through a gradual process, beginning during high school in White Plains, N.Y. According to his Web site (hasidic-reggae.com), Matisyahu's spiritual awakening began in the Rocky Mountains in Colorado. Afterward, he visited Israel where "his dormant Jewish identity stirred into consciousness."

The song "Jerusalem" is a wonderful example of how Matisyahu incorporates faith in the music, the chorus declaring, "Jerusalem, if I forget you/ Let my right hand forget what it's supposed to do." Other songs more subtly present his views, like the title track, which emphasizes the spiritual void in today's young generation.

This CD has all the makings of a staple for underground music lovers,but it would not be out of place in anyone's collection

Michael 5000 Watts?

In one of the stranger collaborations of the year, Hasidic reggae star Matisyahu wants to slow things down: He wants his music to get screwed and chopped by Michael 5000 Watts.

"Yeah, we gonna take it to another level," Watts said of the project. "I found out he was a fan of my work. He reached out and said he wanted me to chop up the record, and we're gonna do it. His music is nice. I like reggae music. [He brings it] from a different twist, but I like it."

Monday, April 03, 2006

MATISYAHU TOUR DATES 2006



New international dates have just been announced!
  • Matis' June 15 show in Cleveland is on sale now.
  • All current dates & pre-sale information follow:
  • Apr 01 Halifax, NS McInnes Room/Dalhousie Univ
  • Apr 09 Washington, DC Charles E. Smith Cntr/GeoWash U
  • Apr 10 Kingston, RI U of RI
  • Apr 11 Northhampton, MA Calvin Theatre (pre-sale going on now)
  • Apr 30 Indio, CA COACHELLA Valley Music and Arts Festival
  • May 06 Dublin, Ireland - Midnight Show at Temple Bar Music Centre (Tickets: www.ticketmaster.ie or 0818719300)
  • May 08 Helsinki, Finland - Nosturi (Tickets: www.lippupalvelu.fi or www.tiketti.fi)
  • May 09 Stockholm, Sweden - Kagelbanan
  • May 10 Oslo, Norway - Garage (Tickets: www.tigernet.no or +47 22 20 73 50)
  • May 17 Amsterdam, Netherlands - Melkweg Max (Tickets: www.ticketservice.nl)
  • May 18 Berlin, Germany - Kalkshcheune (Tickets: www.eventim.de or Ticket hotline Eventim: 01805 / 570 000 (0,12 EUR/Min)
  • May 21 Manchester, UK - Univ (Tickets: Box Office 0161 832 1111)
  • May 22 London, UK - Hammersmith Palais (Tickets: www.gigsandtours.com or Box Office 0871 2200 260)
  • May 28 George, WA Sasquatch Festival
  • Jun 13 Toronto, Canada Molson Amphitheatre (with Dave Mathews Band)
  • Jun 14 Darien Lakes Darien Lakes PAC (with Dave Mathews Band)
  • Jun 15 Cleveland, OH Agora Ballroom pre-sale going on now)
  • Jun 18 Manchester, TN Bonnaroo Music Festival
  • Aug 06 Chicago, IL Lollapalooza in Grant Park

Sunday, April 02, 2006

Canadian review....

One of the best concerts I have been too....

Oh my God, last night I went to go see Matisyahu @ the McInnis Room and it was one of the best concerts I have ever seen!!!!!!!! Matis is amazing. I have never seen anyone who can beatbox for over ten minutes and still go right into another one of his songs. For those of you who don't know who he is....a brief description: 24 year old Hasidic jew from NYC who does reggae. Amazing. Check him out http://www.hasidicreggae.com/ Let's talk about how he is truley intranced when he is singing and flowing. He gets so into it, and while he is dancing you can so his prayer shawl flapping around under his shirt. The band was so good too. They really listened to see what he was going to do next and could really jam. Even though his messages in his songs were for the jewish faith, I really felt that I should start becoming a better person spiritually, seriously. There is a hole in my life and I think my trying to push out my Catholic roots in part of that. I really shouldn't be ashamed to call people out when they think its funny to make fun of my spirituality.

anyhoo.....the concert was amazing, Matisyahu is becoming huge in the States right now and its only a matter of time before Canada really learns about this musical gem.

Matisyahu Tour Album 2006!

This is going to be a journal of my time on the road with Matisyahu, the Hassidic reggae singer.

272 photos

Photos are from between
10 Feb 06 & 17 Feb 06.

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