Thursday, October 26, 2006

Show proves it's possible to embrace differences

Thursday, October 19, 2006
By Mark Bialczak
Staff writer

With the looks of an Orthodox Jew, moves of a reggae singer and voice of a true believer, Matisyahu thoroughly entertained the Syracuse University summit crowd Wednesday night at the Landmark Theatre.
The theme for the daylong event held by SU was "Small World/Big Divide: Building Bridges in an Age of Extremes."
Headliner Matisyahu and the other two acts on the stage, opener State Radio and second-up Kenny Muhammad, drove home the concept that differences can be embraced with music.
Born in West Chester, Pa., as Matthew Miller and raised in White Plains before becoming a devotee of jam band Phish, Matisyahu showed why he's become a welcome visionary in the worlds of Judaism and reggae music.
He took the stage dressed in a black suit topped by a black hat. He wore a long beard, and when the top hat came off, a yarmulke sat underneath.
He owned the stage with an imposing physical presence. Sometimes he moved side to side with the slinky tension of a tiger.
Sometimes he skipped with the unbridled joy of a man unburdening his heart as his words rose from his soul.
With the help of his very sweet five-piece band, the sound was pure and golden reggae.
The crowd was split between SU students and members of the community. Some men also wore yarmulkes.
Together, they sang along to the passionate songs from Matisyahu's latest disc, "Youth."
The title cut drove home his point as he sang with fire in his voice, "Young man, you've got the freedom to choose. You better make the right move."
Amid the throbbing song "Indestructible," he told of a dying father who gave his son this advice: "In this world, fear nothing. Have no fear." In "Chop 'em Down," he sang, "March through the desert one step at a time."
The fans this night seemed to believe the first statement and appeared ready to follow Matisyahu in his march.
Kenny Muhammad, known as the Human Orchestra, made more cool noise with just his mouth than any DJ with a turntable.
The Muslim got into the theme of the night. "We represent one God. We represent unity worldwide," he said of himself and Matisyahu.
State Radio, a three-man band from the Boston area, kept the attention of the small number of early arrivers with a hip sound that encompassed reggae and jam rock.
Lead singer Charlie Stokes got into the passionate mood early with "Camilo," singing, "and now red oil is spillin' down on the street. . . . Will you not refuse this currency, or is blood money just money to you?"
Mark Bialczak can be reached at mbialczak@syracuse.com or 470-2175. His blog "Listen Up" is at www.syracuse.com/blogs/listenup
.
© 2006 The Post-Standard. Used with permission.
Copyright 2006 syracuse.com. All Rights Reserved

Reggae jammin' on for a new generation

By Michael Senft
The Arizona Republic

Walk through any mall, and you'll see stores filled with racks of clothes in the red, green and gold of Jamaica. Stroll through any college campus, and you may hear the sounds of Bob Marley's "Legend" drifting from the dorms. Even Southern California diva Gwen Stefani is modeling the logo of her L.A.M.B. clothing line after the Lion of Judah, a symbol of Rastafarianism.
Reggae "resonates at the core of the human soul. The message, the sound, the beat of reggae, it vibrates the spirit," says Marley's son Ziggy, who has a new album out, "Love Is My Religion," and who is currently on tour.
Reggae never really went away. But 25 years after Marley's death, it's cool again in America, thanks to a new generation of performers who are using Marley's rasta rhythms and "one love" philosophy as a springboard for fresh sounds.
"I realized reggae was hot again when I started noticing [reggae label] Studio One recordings from the '60s being used in commercials," says Chris Wilson, vice president of A&R for Heartbeat Records, a reggae-reissue label.
No reggae musician has matched Marley's influence, but Ziggy has picked up his father's musical mantle, recording such roots-reggae tunes as "Tomorrow People" and "Conscious Party" with his siblings' band the Melody Makers. His second solo album, "Love Is My Religion," blends reggae with acoustic and world-beat touches.
Also riding the crest of the U.S. reggae resurgence is Matisyahu, a self-styled "Hasidic reggae superstar" whose smash albums "Live at Stubb's" and "Youth," which debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 album chart in March, have led to a nonstop tour schedule, videos in regular rotation on MTV and performances on "The Late Show With David Letterman" and other mainstream shows.
"It always seems like there was some reggae singer who was scoring hits, UB40 or Shaggy or someone," says Matisyahu.
He uses the dancehall sound, a hip-hop-reggae hybrid, for the basis of Hebrew rhymes, rapping over a faster, bass-heavy reggae beat, called toasting.
Since Marley's death, reggae hits have generally been from dancehall stars, rather than roots-reggae singers like Marley.
"I used to listen to [dancehall star] Sizzla when I was younger," Matisyahu says. "He was singing about Rastafarianism, black supremacy, Emperor Selassie being God — these are things that I have absolutely no connection with. But still I found a connection with the music, it still spoke to me and inspired my sound."
Shabba Ranks was the first dancehall star to cross over in the United States, scoring numerous hits in the early '90s, including "Mr. Loverman." Since then Shaggy and Sean Paul have topped the charts with their dancehall beats.
"The kids listening to this music don't always realize that it's reggae," says Wilson of Heartbeat Records. "My neighbors were talking about this great rapper named Sean Paul, but his sound is clearly reggae."
Bob Marley's son Damian "Jr. Gong" Marley, who is currently on tour with Ben Harper, has enjoyed crossover success as well. His hit "Welcome to Jamrock" earned Grammys in both the reggae and R&B categories.
"[Damian] is at the forefront of reggae today," Wilson says. "That hit, it's really just a reworking of "Welcome to Jamtown," just him rapping over the original song.
"There's an incredible cross-pollination between Jamaican musicians and American rappers now. If you look at many straight-ahead rap guys, they have dreadlocks and they're rapping like Jamaican dancehall stars."
Although dancehall and its Latin cousin, reggaeton, are popular nationally, new bands are inspired by traditional reggae.
"There is a desire for authenticity in new groups," Wilson says. "I just worked with a band from L.A. called the Aggrolites, who are playing music like some of the earliest reggae sounds.
"They aren't ska and they aren't roots reggae like Marley, but they are playing that music that was popular from about 1968 to '69 in Jamaica."

Awake Zion

Of interest in the latter category is Monica Haim's first-person documentary "Awake Zion," an adventurously fun exploration of the "unsuspecting kinship" — historically and culturally — between reggae and Judaism. (It's not just the extreme hair and rhythmic chanting, and it has origins in slave histories and geographical readings of the Old Testament.) The journey takes Haim, herself a roots reggae-loving, Miami-born Jewish girl, from Rasta outposts in Jamaica to the dancehall scene in Tel Aviv to the Crown Heights, Brooklyn, popularity of Orthodox Jewish reggae star Matisyahu, and, as you might suspect, is set to a propulsive, infectious soundtrack. What shimmers, though, is the hopefulness of those who embrace similarities, who view spirituality in terms of commonality instead of apartness.

Matisyahu uses his music to bridge extremes

Friday, October 13, 2006

By Mark Bialczak Staff writer

Nicci Brown knew immediately that she wanted to include a concert to help drive home the message of the daylong Syracuse University summit "Small World/Big Divide: Building Bridges in an Age of Extremes."
"I think we recognize that people perceive and process information in many ways," says Brown, associate vice president at SU, who organized the event that starts at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Schine Student Center's Goldstein Auditorium and concludes at 7:30 p.m. with a Landmark Theatre concert featuring Matisyahu, Kenny Muhammad the Human Orchestra and State Radio.
"That's why (the summit) will involve panel discussions and end with music. Music can reach people in a deep way that maybe words cannot reach them," Brown says.
The lyrics that accompany the blend of reggae and hip-hop musical styles of Matisyahu have been reaching a diverse audience since his 2004 debut disc, "Shake Off the Dust . . . Arise."
Matisyahu was born in West Chester, Pa., as Matthew Miller. He was raised in White Plains before following the jam band Phish on the road and living in
Colorado and Oregon. But it was a trip to Israel that led to his position as Orthodox Judaic singer-songwriter Matisyahu, which is the Hebrew version of his first name.
The 2005 single of a live performance of his song "King Without a Crown" and this March's CD "Youth" have helped propel Matisyahu into the national spotlight. His performance at the Raga Muffins Festival in Los Angeles in March earned a stellar review with the headline "A new testament for the reggae world Matisyahu enraptures Ragga Muffins Festival with his message and ebullient presence."
His message, driven home by the lyrics of the title cut from "Youth," is: Think hard and do something about your world.
"Young man, control in your hands," he sings to the reggae lilt. "Slam your fist on the table and make your demands. Take a stand, fan the fire for the flame of youth. Got the freedom to choose, better make the right move."
Matisyahu will share the night with Kenny Muhammad the Human Orchestra, a Muslim from Queens who's known for his one-man-band performance, and State Radio, a Massachusetts-based band noted for its progressive politics and blend of funk and rock.
"We wanted something this diverse," Brown says. "(The artists) have been informed about what this day is about. Matisyahu was scheduled to perform, I believe, in another part of the country for this day. When we posed the idea for him to be part of the daylong expression, he agreed."


Mark Bialczak can be reached at mbialczak@syracuse.com or 470-2175. His blog "Listen Up" is at www.syracuse.com/blogs/listenup.


© 2006 The Post-Standard. Used with permission.
Copyright 2006 syracuse.com. All Rights Reserved.

Jewish Teens Follow A Reggae Rapper

Matisyahu Observes The Orthodox Lifestyle, Even When He's On The Road

By FRANCES GRANDY TAYLOR
Courant Staff Writer
October 24 2006
He lives in Crown Heights, the heart of the Orthodox Jewish community in Brooklyn, but Matisyahu is a rapper. He sings reggae-style and raps about his faith and the world from an Orthodox Jewish perspective. But he's not just talk. On the road, he travels with his wife and child and observes on a daily basis the fundamentals of his faith. While there are often logistics to work out, Matisyahu said he does not view the sometimes-strict requirements of his faith as an obstacle as the first Orthodox Jewish reggae rapper."Journeys are an essential part of Judaism- it's at the core of Judaism,'` he said in a recent interview. "Being on the road is instrumental to my service to God. It's part of who I am and what I do." Matisyahu will appear tonight at the Jorgensen Center for the Performing Arts on the Storrs campus of the University of Connecticut. The singer prays three times a day, and each evening after a performance he makes a minyon - a prayer group that according to Jewish law requires a certain number of participants. To observe Sukkot, a harvest holiday in Judaism, the singer had a portable pop-up tent backstage where his family and some crew members ate all their meals. The singer grew up in White Plains, and though the family was devout, he came to his Orthodox lifestyle after attending an Orthodox Jewish high school. Since then, he said, he has chosen to immerse himself in his faith. His lyrics have proved a draw to teens and college-age students, talking about Judaism and promoting peace and unity. Matisyahu said he often relies on help from Chabad, a Jewish organization whose mission is to provide a place for Jews to observe their faith and customs no matter where they are in the world. "I try to connect with local rabbis, so they can be a part," he said. Rabbi Shlomo Hecht, who leads the Chabad center at UConn, met Matisyahu during the singer's previous trip through the state last year. Hecht, who grew up in Crown Heights, attends the same Brooklyn synagogue as Matisyahu. "It's amazing to see him, an Orthodox Jew, out there doing what he does, talking about Judaism," Hecht said. "And the Jewish kids really love it."While the singer has fans from all faiths, he has become a phenomenon among Jewish youth. Three busloads of Jewish teens are coming to the performance, sponsored by UConn Hillel, the Jewish Federation of Greater Hartford and the Jewish Community Center. His first album, "Shake Off the Dust ... Arise," was released in 2004. His latest album, "Youth," was released in March. "Matisyahu makes it cool to be a Jew," said Josh Cohen, teen director at the Jewish Community Center, who says he has also become a fan. "He's been able to mix Jewish spirituality with hip-hop. When you listen, you hear him talking about Jewish history and prayers, but he does it all in reggae style. It's all in the music."Curtis Pitegoff, 16, first heard Matisyahu a year ago and often downloaded live performances from the Internet to listen to the rapper. "He's upbeat, but his lyrics talk about the serious ideals of Judaism," said Pitegoff, a West Hartford resident who will attend the show. "At the same time he's going for the mainstream. He is the first to really do that."
Copyright 2006, Hartford Courant

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Matisyahu To Headline Festival Of Light

Get out yer yarmulkes, it’s time for Hannukah…except with Hasidic reggae artist Matisyahu and not Adam Sandler. Those wanting to see Matisyahu and his band Roots Tonic perform on Dec. 16-19 can roll right over to Hammerstein Ballroom in New York to witness the first Festival of Light concert series, with the treat of a different special opening act each night.
Fan members can buy tickets now through www.matisyahuworld.com; fans can join “The Bridge,” the official fan club, and get exclusive access to tickets before public sale.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Unlikely reggae star rocks armory

By MICHAEL LISI, Special to the Times Union
First published: Wednesday, October 18, 2006

ALBANY -- Matisyahu is arguably the most popular reggae artist in America. He's also one of reggae's most unlikely superstars. He's a Hasidic singer and rapper who embraces Jewish spirituality in his music, at times singing in Hebrew and taking lyrics from the Torah.


Musically, Matisyahu serves up an amalgam of dance-hall reggae, hip-hop, rock and even ska-flavored punk, sung with a slight Jamaican accent -- even though he's a one-time Phish fan from White Plains.

Matisyahu was mesmerizing Tuesday night at the Washington Avenue Armory, playing 90 minutes of intense, infectious reggae and hip-hop that had fans screaming, swaying, dancing and taking cellphone photos from start to end.

The crowd of about 1,500 was mostly college-aged, although there were more than a few teens, like 13-year-old Josh Fisher, who saw Matisyahu for the first time. And yarmulkes were the order of the night for a noticeable number of fans, although few were as outward with their faith as Matisyahu.

Dressed in a black overcoat, sporting a bushy beard and a kipa, Matisyahu looked downright odd fronting a searing five-piece band that pulsed bass-heavy reggae beats and grinding, guitar-fueled rock. But somehow it all fit together, punctuated by Matisyahu as he jumped, skipped and swirled around the stage, moving to the beat during pounding readings of "Chop 'Em Down" and "Fire of Heaven/Altar of Faith," and the slow reggae groove of "Exaltation."

And watching Matisyahu and an identically dressed male dancer do a take on a traditional Jewish dance called the Hora during a wild version of "Youth" was, well, different to say the least. Different but impossible not to watch, and in context and done sincerely.

Matisyahu's sincerity and spirituality elevates him from novelty act status. Hearing his strong, soaring tenor sing "We're all children in the eyes of God" during "Close Your Eyes," you just wanted to close your eyes and believe it. Matisyahu isn't the first to meld reggae and spirituality -- Bob Marley did it years before Matisyahu was born. But Matisyahu does it in a way no one else ever has, and it worked well in Albany on Tuesday night.

State Radio, a hard-hitting Boston-based reggae/ska-punk act, offered up a solid 30-minute performance that sounded somewhat like a hyped-up cross between The Police, Pearl Jam and 1980 ska act Bad Manners. The power trio was intriguing but loud -- obnoxiously loud. Just because your amp goes to 11 doesn't mean you have to play at 11.

Moshav, a five-piece jam-band act from Israel, won some new fans with a 30-minute set that echoed Pearl Jam at times. Led by singer Yehuda Solomon, Moshav mixed it up, injecting reggae and Middle Eastern rhythms into their rock, giving it an edgy ethnic sound that was hard to resist.

Michael Lisi is a freelance music critic from Clifton Park and a frequent contributor to the Times Union.

MUSIC REVIEW

MATISYAHU with State Radio and Moshav

When: 7:45 p.m. Tuesday

Where: The Washington Avenue Armory, Washington Avenue, Albany

Length: Matisyahu, 90 minutes; State Radio, 30 minutes; Moshav, 30 minutes

Crowd: A predominantly Jewish, college-aged crowd of about 1,500, out to dance and soak up the hip-hop reggae sounds of Hasidic reggae star Matisyahu.

Highlights: "Time of Your Song, "Youth," "Exaltation."

Matisyahu: from white suburban teenager to Chassidic reggae star

By Laura Rheinheimer and
Tomer Altman

Matthew Miller, a self-described “white suburban teenager,” grew up in White Plains, New York, to Reconstructionist Jewish parents. He describes his teenage years as being filled with drugs and treif, (non-kosher food) and listening to hip-hop and reggae.

Today, Matthew Miller is Matisyahu Miller, an observant Chassidic Jew and top-selling artist on the Sony-BMG label. He performs across the country to Jews and non-Jews alike. His most popular song, “King Without a Crown,” made it to number seven in the Billboard charts.
In early September, the artist walked onto stage at the San Jose Civic Auditorium in a black coat and fedora, singing to more than 2,000 fans of all ages and backgrounds. Some teenagers showed up just to hear good music and have a turn in the mosh pit. Others felt more connected to Matisyahu’s connection with G-d.


Elisa Becerra, who was raised Christian, says Matisyahu’s music moved her to seek a deeper connection with G-d, through Orthodoxy. “You feel like the music is speaking directly to you,” Becerra says. “He just has a way of making people feel good.”


Devorah Witt, an Orthodox Jew visiting from Jerusalem, says Matisyahu’s music goes beyond good tunes and inspiration. “I think his music is actively bringing Moshiach,” she says.


Eli Altschuler, a Modern Orthodox Jew from Los Angeles, disagrees. The music is sincere, Altschuler says, but it doesn’t further his own religious convictions.


“He has given the Lubavitch a lot of strength,” adds Avi Blumenstein. “As a person, he’s very inspirational to people worldwide.”


In the Bay Area, however, Matisyahu may be strengthening the religiosity of young Jews. The mere presence of the reggae superstar, whose songs fill teenagers’ MySpace pages and mainstream radio stations, has inspired impressionable youths to show their Jewish pride.
David Linder, a 16-year-old from Saratoga, dons a kippah “for respect” and proudly announces that he skateboards to Matisyahu’s music on his iPod.


“He’s like a role model to me,” Linder says. “You never see a Jewish guy getting up there and doing reggae.”


Linder and a group of friends buy Matisyahu T-shirts to wear at the show, and argue over who gets the title of “biggest fan.” Thirty young adults attended the show together with the Silicon Valley Young Adults Division, a group of the Jewish Federation of Silicon Valley.

Matisyhau’s San Jose performace included his hit “King Without a Crown” and “Jerusalem.” Many of the words are difficult to understand because of the reggae style of singing, but some of the messages come across loud and clear.


Matisyahu performs “Youth,” a song without strong religious undertones that calls for young men to “make their demands.” Longtime friend and fellow Yeshiva student, Zalman Shimon Wircberg, who is accompanying the Millers on tour, jumps onstage and does Chasidic-style dancing with Matisyahu. The crowd demands two encore songs, and the concert ends well past midnight.

Shabbos
In the days preceding the show, Matisyahu spends Shabbos as any other devout Orthodox Jew, quietly finishing his prayers at the house of Berkeley Chabad Rabbi Yehuda Ferris, while dozens of loud Jewish fraternity members drink wine. During the meal, Matisyahu receives praise after praise about his music, and he accepts each compliment with a “thank you.” It’s hard to imagine this quiet, humble Chasid getting onstage and singing his heart out to thousands of fans.


On tour with Matisyahu is his wife Tahlia, who is due with their second child in November, and son Laivy Yitzhak, 1. The family travels with him when they can, and Tahlia has her own thing going on—she teaches a class on intimacy to young Jews. The Miller family travels from Chabad house to Chabad house while on tour, taking every effort to be observant. “It’s not hard; you just have to know what to look out for,” Matisyahu says.


“When you have your mind made up to do something, you can do it,” he says.


But Matisyahu wasn’t always so directed. For much of his teenage years, he pursued music under the alias “MC Truth” with the group MC Mystic’s Soulfari Band in the New York area. After years of listening to reggae, indulging in marijuana and following the band Phish, he was left feeling soulless and wanted to get out of a life that was “limiting.”


“I started thinking about the world in a different perspective,” Matisyahu says, and he started a gradual process of becoming more religious, which stemmed from a “yearning to go back and communicate with HaShem.”


It was a hard decision for Matisyahu, but he credits the friendly and funny Chabad emissaries for making the transition to being an observant Jew easier. His family took it hard, he says, and they thought it was just another youthful indiscretion.


“My mom was going through a mental breakdown—‘he used to be into drugs, now he’s religious. I don’t know which is worse,’” Matisyahu recalls.


Matisyahu took Halacha (Jewish law) head-on in 2001, and left music behind for a while.


“I made a break from everything in my past,” he says. He thought music would play a role in his life like any other Orthodox Jew, through traditional Jewish music.


“I soon stopped lying to myself and realized that Jewish music sucks basically,” Matisyahu says. “And if I wanted to hear Jewish music, I was going to have to create my own.”


He says his music is based on genres he knew from the past—hip-hop and reggae—but with some of the Jewish ideas and concepts, and found inspiration in Chasidic songs and Sephardic melodies. He says he heard hip-hop beats behind the traditional niggunim (melodies).


Some of the same phrases cross over from reggae. Lyrics such as “fire descends from on high in the shape of a lion/ burn the sacrifice of pride and ride on to Mount Zion” can easily be compared to Bob Marley’s words.


Perhaps it is the timeless themes, or the novelty of a man in a black coat, tzittzit (fringes) and a fedorah twirling onstage, but whatever the reason, Matisyahu quickly went from performing in coffee shops in New York to selling out shows in world capitals.


Two years ago, as he was building a following and grabbing some media attention, he met Tahlia, a New York University student who contacted him to do a video. He kept bumping into her around town, and was intrigued. He recalls skating to mincha together, and was impressed by her spunk dodging in and out of traffic.


“I never saw a girl rollerblade like that,” Matisyahu says. “After two or three dates, I said, ‘This’ll work.’”


While his popularity grows, and he continues to inspire and touch fans from all walks of life, Matisyahu says even though the crowd he attracts isn’t your typical shul-going bunch, his music is an outlet for his own expression; making tunes is something he felt he needed to do.


“I like being out there and saying, ‘This is who I am,’” Matisyahu says.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Music

I chose to listen and respond to the Matisyahu, "Youth" album. I remember the very first time I heard of Matisyahu, I was so suprised. I actually remember it perfectly, I went to go visit my cousins at OSU and when I went to their dorms, in the lobby on the bulletin there was a picture of a religious man holding a microphone. On the paper it said, "Chabad presents, Matisyahu in Concert at OSU". I was shocked. I called the number on the paper and actually went to go see that concert. This was probably around 2-3 years ago, and now I sign on to American Online and what's the first thing I see, "Matisyahu". I can't believe how well he has been doing, he really made a name for himself. I really enjoyed listening to his "Youth" album, personally I love reggae. Matisyahu uses good beats, along with Jewish related words. Not only is he promoting good music, he is also promoting Judaism. He is proof that one can be religious and still have a life in the "secular" world. I usually don't choose favorites, but if I had to choose one song off of the Youth album, it would be King Without A Crown. I love how it crescendos throughout the whole song, it makes you feel real good. No one has ever really seen a man like this before, it really is unbelieveable if you think about it. He was able to connect to people through his music, many can relate to the type of music and enjoy it. I don't know Matisyahu personally, however maybe Judiasm and Hip-Hop/Reggae are both extremely important in his life and he is able to express both, Judiasm through the words and Hip-Hop/Reggae through the beats and melodies. Lastly, I even saw the Matisyahu cd at starbucks. That may not sound amazing, however I always look at the starbucks cds and they only pick and choose which cds they would like to sell. It just so happens that out of all the cds, Matisyahu was one of them. That has to say something.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Matisyahu uses his music to bridge extremes

Friday, October 13, 2006
By Mark Bialczak
Staff writer

Nicci Brown knew immediately that she wanted to include a concert to help drive home the message of the daylong Syracuse University summit "Small World/Big Divide: Building Bridges in an Age of Extremes."

"I think we recognize that people perceive and process information in many ways," says Brown, associate vice president at SU, who organized the event that starts at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Schine Student Center's Goldstein Auditorium and concludes at 7:30 p.m. with a Landmark Theatre concert featuring Matisyahu, Kenny Muhammad the Human Orchestra and State Radio.

"That's why (the summit) will involve panel discussions and end with music. Music can reach people in a deep way that maybe words cannot reach them," Brown says.

The lyrics that accompany the blend of reggae and hip-hop musical styles of Matisyahu have been reaching a diverse audience since his 2004 debut disc, "Shake Off the Dust . . . Arise."

Matisyahu was born in West Chester, Pa., as Matthew Miller. He was raised in White Plains before following the jam band Phish on the road and living in

Colorado and Oregon. But it was a trip to Israel that led to his position as Orthodox Judaic singer-songwriter Matisyahu, which is the Hebrew version of his first name.

The 2005 single of a live performance of his song "King Without a Crown" and this March's CD "Youth" have helped propel Matisyahu into the national spotlight. His performance at the Raga Muffins Festival in Los Angeles in March earned a stellar review with the headline "A new testament for the reggae world Matisyahu enraptures Ragga Muffins Festival with his message and ebullient presence."

His message, driven home by the lyrics of the title cut from "Youth," is: Think hard and do something about your world.

"Young man, control in your hands," he sings to the reggae lilt. "Slam your fist on the table and make your demands. Take a stand, fan the fire for the flame of youth. Got the freedom to choose, better make the right move."

Matisyahu will share the night with Kenny Muhammad the Human Orchestra, a Muslim from Queens who's known for his one-man-band performance, and State Radio, a Massachusetts-based band noted for its progressive politics and blend of funk and rock.

"We wanted something this diverse," Brown says. "(The artists) have been informed about what this day is about. Matisyahu was scheduled to perform, I believe, in another part of the country for this day. When we posed the idea for him to be part of the daylong expression, he agreed."

Mark Bialczak can be reached at mbialczak@syracuse.com or 470-2175. His blog "Listen Up" is at www.syracuse.com/blogs/listenup.
© 2006 The Post-Standard. Used with permission.


Copyright 2006 syracuse.com. All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Unorthodox, but kosher

Contemporary Jewish music communicates Judaism through varied styles

By MICHAEL LISI, Special to the Times Union
First published: Thursday, October 12, 2006

Matisyahu matters to Sheera Tanzman.


Rapping spiritual lyrics -- some taken directly from the Torah -- with a Jamaican accent over reggae-tinged hip-hop beats, the bearded singer with the wide-brimmed hat resonates with the 19-year-old sophomore at the University at Albany.

The Hasidic rapper expresses his yearnings for the Promised Land, his desire to follow Hashem (Hebrew for God) and his love of the Jewish culture and religion. And Tanzman, who returned from a 10-month stay in Israel in August, relates.

"What he says hits home for me," said Tanzman, who saw Matisyahu perform in Israel. "His song 'Return to Zion' makes me cry. You feel what he's saying."

She's not alone. Even before his single "King Without a Crown" broke through last year, Jewish teens and 20somethings have embraced Matisyahu, whose debut studio album "Youth" has sold around a half-million copies. The 27-year-old rapper, who plays the Washington Avenue Armory in Albany on Tuesday, has appeared on MTV and played Lollapalloza.

His success has brought attention to other members of the contemporary Jewish music scene, a diverse mix of musicians who communicate their Judaism through varied musical styles, attracting fans even as they raise the eyebrows among skeptical traditionalists and a few rabbis.

Balkan Beat Box is a mash-up of electronica, Eastern European sounds, rock and hip-hop, with horns, DJs and belly dancers. Hip Hop Hoodios is a Latino-Jewish hybrid that plays Latin funk and klezmer. Joshua Nelson melds soul and Jewish liturgical music -- a blend he calls "Kosher-Gospel."

Klezmer pioneers The Klezmatics, who play The Egg in Albany on Sunday, and Jewish funk-rockers Blue Fringe were two of more than 60 performers at last month's Oy!hoo Festival, a weeklong contemporary Jewish music celebration in Manhattan.

"One of the unique things about Matisyahu, and in their own way, Phish, is that they find ways of injecting Jewish DNA into their music," said Seth Rogovoy, a longtime music critic and Jewish music authority, Who wrote "The Essential Klezmer" in 2000.

"At its best, it's really effective and people respond. That's what Bob Marley tapped into 30 years ago."

Sacred and secular

For young people like Tanzman, contemporary Jewish music offers an alternate way to embrace their faith and culture -- secular-sounding music with a spiritual side. It's similar to what Christian rock is for young Christians -- although the subject matter can be less than orthodox.

"I've seen that happen, especially when The Beastie Boys are rapping about matzo and Manischewitz wine," said Rogovoy. "That's something a 14-year-old boy can feel proud of."

For Moshav, a Jewish rock/jam band opening for Matisyahu at the Armory, the opposition between sacred and secular doesn't apply. "I don't think there's a point where Judaism ends and rock music begins," said vocalist and guitarist Duvid Swirsky, speaking from Israel. "It's all mixed together. We're Jews, we all love music, and it's impossible to separate one from the other."

The recent boom has its roots in the klezmer revival of the late 1970s, a musical renaissance in which Jewish musicians fused traditional music with jazz, blues and folk influences. The often wild result was something of a revelation for traditional Jews raised on the "Yiddish swing" of the 1930s and '40s, a subgenre made famous by the Andrews Sisters' smash "Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen."

"The fact was that klezmer music was Jewish; you could hear it was Jewish," said Frank London, the Klezmatics' trumpet player, founder and leader. "It was really good and funky and interesting. We laid the groundwork for something that people could reject."

Matisyahu and other contemporary Jewish artists who embrace reggae and hip hop, then, are the next step in the process: It's music that middle-aged klezmer fans might view as too wild.

New labels needed

London suggests the genre has grown wide enough to need a new label, or several.

"If the band has something that makes them identify as Jewish, it's Jewish contemporary music," he said. "It can draw directly from traditional Jewish music sources, Jewish texts or mean singing in Hebrew. There's a lot going on."

That's no surprise coming from London, whose band plays no klezmer on their latest record "Wonder Wheel," an album of folk music set to Woody Guthrie's lyrics.

Still, it's hard not to wonder if music made by Matisyahu and his contemporaries can stand the test of time. And while the music's message is essentially Jewish, it may be a mixed blessing, London said.

"Anytime you're a minority -- less than 1 percent of the world is Jewish -- and doing something that positively embraces that, it's a good thing," he said.

"On the other hand, we're all humans -- and part of me wishes there would be more focus on humanity. When can we just get over it and realize we're all the same?"

Michael Lisi is a freelance writer and frequent contributor to the Times Union.

Music taps into a spiritual side

By SOLVEJ SCHOU

Associated Press

Matisyahu, aka Matthew Miller, has gone from underground curiosity to mainstream star in the course of a year.

The 29-year-old ultraconservative Orthodox Jew, who grew up nonreligious in White Plains, followed up the hit "Live at Stubb's" with his major-label debut "Youth." He also became a father -- welcoming the birth of his son, Laivy, now a year old.

In May, the 6-foot-3 singer -- wearing the traditional long beard, white shirt and black pants of Hasidic men, plus a pair of hip Puma sneakers -- discussed spirituality, parenthood and fame, and balancing being Orthodox within the mostly secular world of music.

Q: A sociologist once said that "music is the kids' religion." How do you reflect on that?

A: In terms of the idea of music being like religion, the two are obviously bound up with each other. From a Jewish perspective, music was used in the temple. The temple was the place where the revelation of God was actually present. ... In every religion and culture, music has been used for the purpose of opening people up in order to sense the spiritual, to sense something which transcends this world.

Q: When you perform ... in front of thousands of people, is it spiritual?

A: There's a spirituality whether you're on stage in front of 25,000 people, or whether you're in a living room with your friend playing guitar. ... People come to a music festival ... to look for some kind of break out of the mundane. That's what music is supposed to offer to people. That's my goal.

Q: What has the last year been like for you?

A: A year ago, I think we were touring, maybe playing some college shows. Basically, "Live at Stubb's" had come out. It was just starting to get radio play. We were going through the summer touring festivals and playing shows. The record started taking off, doing well. A lot has changed.

Q: How do you balance a child, a young son, with playing music?

A: It's a balancing act, but everyone has a balancing act. Having a child, there's absolutely nothing like it in the entire world. Not performing a concert, not owning any car, not being successful at anything, no amount of fame or money. There's nothing like the reward of having a child. You realize how much your parents loved you.

Q: Do you play your music for your son?

A: Yeah, I do sometimes. At first, when he was a really small baby, he would cry. And I would turn the music on pretty loud. That would get him to stop crying. I don't really play it for him that much now. Maybe in the car. I dance with him sometimes, if he's in a bad mood, or if he's kvetchy. I'll pick him up and I'll do some song and dance with him. He loves that.

Q: How do you feel about the secular music community embracing your albums?

A: It was never a question. ... I grew up listening to secular music, going to see concerts and shows. ... I guess growing up, I knew I was a Jewish person, but I didn't relate to my experience. My experience isn't what you would call a Jewish experience. But from the time I was little, I imagined myself making music, playing music. The fact that the audience that likes the music is not necessarily Jewish does not come as a surprise.

Q: There are Orthodox tenets you're supposed to follow, like not performing with nonreligious women in public. Does that apply today, performing on the same stage as female-fronted bands such the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Sleater-Kinney?

A: I probably wouldn't go see them. Unfortunately, there are some really wonderful female singers I wouldn't see. ... The law is that a man is only supposed to hear his wife singing. The idea being that the female voice is a very holy thing. ... I adhere by that pretty much.

Q: But do you fully agree with that law?

A: No, I don't necessarily agree with it. To me, I don't consider the female voice to be that sexual. It can be, but in a lot of cases I don't think it is. For example, I was on an airplane watching TV, and Natasha Bedingfeld was on. I watched it, and I was intrigued by it, from a professional standpoint. She was performing her hit song, but with an acoustic guitar player and three back-up gospel singers. It was amazing. The thought of sexuality didn't cross my mind at all. So I don't necessarily agree with it all the time.

I guess part of the law is creating a fence. It doesn't always make that much sense in the moment, but it might protect you from falling into the wrong places. In general, that's part of the Jewish religion, or adhering to any religion, in an Orthodox way. You adapt yourself to it, and you take it into yourself as well. Mostly when people go through the world they adapt everything to themselves instead of submitting to the greater thing.

Jewish entertainment

Jewish music fans will have a lot to cheer about this week, with The Klezmatics and Matisyahu coming to town on Sunday and Tuesday, respectively.

The Klezmatics with Susan McKeown and Boo Reiners

When: 7 p.m. Sunday

Where: The Egg, Empire State Plaza, Albany

Tickets: $24

Info: 473-1845

Matisyahu

with Moshav and State Radio

When: 8 p.m. on Tuesday

Where: Washington Avenue Armory Sports and Convention Arena, 195 Washington Ave., Albany

Tickets: $30; available in advance at the Armory box office or online at http://www.ticketmaster.com

Info: 694-7160

The following is a quick-hit list of contemporary Jewish music artists and resources worth checking out online:

Artists:

Balkan Beat Box: http://www.balkanbeatbox.com

Hip Hop Hoodios: http://www.hoodios.com

The Klezmatics: http://www.klezmatics.com

Matisyahu: http://www.matisyahu.org

Moshav: http://www.moshavband.com

Joshua Nelson: http://www.joshuanelson.com

Resources:

Oy!hoo: http://www.oyhoo.com

Seth Rogovoy: http://www.rogovoy.com

Jdub Records (contemporary Jewish record label): http://www.jdubrecords.org

Tzadik Records (contemporary Jewish record label): http://www.tzadik.com


All Times Union materials copyright 1996-2006, Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation, Albany, N.Y.
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