Posted on 03/30/2006 6:09:47 PM PST by SJackson
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Matisyahus black hat, Sanneh wrote, also helps obscure something that might otherwise be more obvious: his race. He is a student of the Chabad-Lubavitch philosophy, but he is also a white reggae singer with an all- white band, playing (on Monday night, anyway) to an almost all-white crowd. Yet he has mainly avoided thorny questions about cultural appropriation.
It's OK as long as someone buys the tunes. There's a lesson there for the Times about selling newspapers.
To question this man's right to his own music is over the top ~ and suggests his critics don't have the slightest idea where the Bible came from.
It's Hebrew Hammertime
Nice poster. What's reggae? Just kidding...
No.
No it's not.
My brother just bought his album and it is awsome.
His messages are very positive.
typical "lets find the racism somewhere" article.
Bad Brains got dissed by the music snobs because they fused alternative and metal with reggae.
Eminem got plenty of flack in his early days because he was white. When Dr. Dre first heard tapes Eminem sent him, the assumed he was black until he went to see him perform one night and did a double take.
If Harry Belafonte can sign Hava Nagila at Carnegie Hall, I'd say the answer is 'yes.' ;)
Stir It Up....
Here is a horrible article I read on Matisyahu recently while trying to find more about him.
http://www.slate.com/id/2138032/
I don't understand the reason. But I've come across a large numnber of white reggae musicians. Much larger than the Eminem white rapper phenomenon which is very much a minority, limited phemomenon within rap.
Maybe reggae has a more universal appeal much like the Irish music. You have a lot of non-Irish playing Irish music.
What do you expect from Slate???
Matisyahu's music is awesome!!!
Psalm 137--
By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat, sat and wept, as we thought of Zion.
There on the willows we hung up our lyres,
for our captors asked us there for songs, our tormentors, for amusement,
"Sing us one of the songs of Zion."
How can we sing a song of the Lord on alien soil?
If I forget you, O Jerusalem, let my right hand wither;
let my tongue stick to my palate if I cease to think of you,
if I do not keep Jerusalem in memory even at my happiest hour.
Remember, O Lord, against the Edomites the day of Jerusalem's fall;
how they cried, "Strip her, strip her to her very foundations!"
Fair Babylon, you predator,
a blessing on him who repays you in kind what you have inflicted on us;
a blessing on him who seizes your babies
and dashes them against the rocks.
Bob Marley--
By the rivers of Babylon
Where he sat down
And there he wept when he remembered Zion.
Oh from wicked, carry us away from captivity
Required from us a song
How can we singing out for song in a strange land.
So let the words of our mouth
And the meditations of our hearts
Be acceptable in thy sight
O-verride
By the rivers of Babylon
Where he sat down
And there he wept when he remembered Zion.
Oh from wicked, carry us away from captivity
Required from us a song
How can we singing out for song in a strange land.
How can we singing out for song in a strange land.
That emphasis on self-actualization and uplift, combined with Matisyahu's ceaseless diatribes about the moral impurity of secular life, is reminiscent of nothing so much as Christian rock. It's a reminder that Orthodox Jewish fundamentalists share a lot with their Christian counterparts, including political prioritiesand that there's no one quite so beloved of the Left Behind crowd these days than Orthodox Jews, whose in-gathering in Israel is essential stage setting for the coming of the Rapture. (At which point, presumably, Jews will be cast into the hellfire.) As if to make explicit the burgeoning alliance, Matisyahu recently recorded "Roots in Stereo," a duet with evangelical rap-rockers P.O.D. It's a cruddy piece of music and, as politics, it can't be good for the Jews.
Jody needs to lighten up a bit, it's music he's writing about, not something important like baseball. Maybe the promotion will come through next year.
Somebody told me that "Matisyahu" is the Hebrew "Matthew".
He does a nice job and his stuff is very well produced. But whenever I hear one of his tunes, I can't help but grin and wonder if it's satire that nobody "got" and so he decided to play it coy and just go with the flow. Like sort of a too-subtle version of what Weird Al Yankovich does.
Matisyahu has to cash in NOW for everything he can get because I don't see this fad lasting very long. Anyways, there's plenty of regular white people who do reggae very well. Long Beach Dub Allstars (formerly backing up Bradley Nowell in Sublime) for example.
I'd pay good money to hear a Jew sing "Legalize It."
I wonder if Slate magazine would be ripping the guy if it was Mohamed-yahu. I'm sure they would have nothing but praise if it was ... especially if the song was about killing Jews and Infedels.
Good song that King Without a Crown. The guy is a one-of-a-kind ... a greate marketing point.
Other white reggae group (sort of) that is excellent is 311.
Check out these lyrics from his biggest hit (Sung to reggae of course):
Matisyahu - King Without A Crown
You're all that I have and you're all that I need
Each and every day I pray to get to know you please
I want to be close to you, yes I'm so hungry
You're like water for my soul when it gets thirsty
Without you there's no me
You're the air that I breathe
Sometimes the world is dark and I just can't see
With these, demons surround all around to bring me down to negativity
But I believe, yes I believe, I said I believe
I'll stand on my own two feet
Won't be brought down on one knee
Fight with all of my might and get these demons to flee
Hashem's rays fire blaze burn bright and I believe
Out of darkness comes light, twilight unto the heights
Crown Heights burnin' up all through till midnight
Said, thank you to my God, now I finally got it right
And I'll fight with all of my heart, and all a' my soul, and all a' my might
What's this feeling?
My love will rip a hole in the ceiling
Givin' myself to you from the essence of my being
Sing to my God all these songs of love and healing
Want Mashiach now so it's time we start revealing 1
Me no want no sinsemilla.
That would only bring me down
Burn away my brain no way my brain is to compound
Torah food for my brain let it rain till I drown
Thunder!
Let the blessings come down
Strip away the layers and reveal your soul
Got to give yourself up and then you become whole
You're a slave to yourself and you don't even know
You want to live the fast life but your brain moves slow
If you're trying to stay high then you're bound to stay low
You want God but you can't deflate your ego
If you're already there then there's nowhere to go
If you're cup's already full then its bound to overflow
If you're drowning in the water's and you can't stay afloat
Ask Hashem for mercy and he'll throw you a rope
You're looking for help from God you say he couldn't be found
Looking up to the sky and searchin' beneath the ground
Like a King without his Crown
Yes, you keep fallin' down
You really want to live but can't get rid of your frown
Tried to reach unto the heights and wound bound down on the ground
Given up your pride and the you heard a sound
Out of night comes day and out of day comes light
Nullified to the One like sunlight in a ray,
Makin' room for his love and a fire gone blaze
What's this feeling?
My love will rip a hole in the ceiling
Givin' myself to you from the essence of my being
Sing to my God all these songs of love and healing
Want Mashiach now so it's time we start revealing
Reelin' him in
Where ya been
Where ya been
Where ya been for so long
It's hard to stay strong been livin' in galus (exile) for 2000 years strong
Where ya been for so long
Been livin in this exile for too long
What's this feeling?
My love will rip a hole in the ceiling
Givin' myself to you from the essence of my being
Sing to my God all these songs of love and healing
Want Mashiach now so it's time we start revealing
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