Updated:
06:53 PM EST
Jewish Hip-Hop Artists Rap on Torah,
Chanukah
By Jonathan
Stempel, Reuters
NEW YORK (Dec. 7) - They have baggy clothing,
backward baseball caps, the "bling bling" and racy lyrics. And these
days, rappers sometimes wear yarmulkes too.
Hip-hop music, which grew out of black inner
cities, isn't typically associated with Jews, but as the genre has
grown more popular, some Jewish artists have embraced it as their
own, while transcending theological and ethnic differences.
New York-based Hip Hop Hoodios, whose name is a
play on the Spanish word for Jews, is a Latino-Jewish group that has
recorded in English, Spanish and Hebrew. Their lyrics include such
sardonic lines as: "My nose is large, and you know I'm in
charge."
A popular 26-year-old Hasidic singer,
Matisyahu, raps in a brimmed hat and dark suit over reggae beats.
"Torah food for my brain let it rain till I drown, Thunder! Let the
blessings come down," he says in "King Without a Crown."
The growing genre has also seen artists like
Remedy collaborate with mainstream acts like Wu-Tang Clan.
"It's very much a representation of the
cooperative state of Jewish and black relations today," said Rabbi
Marc Schneier, president of the Foundation for Ethnic Understanding,
which is chaired by hip-hop impresario Russell Simmons. "I view
cooperation, not conflict, as the defining element."
While some commentators still see rifts between
American blacks and Jews, many agree that relations have improved
greatly. At the same time, hip-hop has gone mainstream.
Experts said hip-hop can appeal to audiences of
diverse backgrounds, including Jews, while still maintaining its
authenticity.
"It's impossible to separate this phenomenon
from a move by Jews in their late teens to late 30s to explicitly
identify themselves as Jews in American popular culture," said Joel
Schalit, managing editor of Tikkun magazine, who personally likes
two Israeli Hebrew-language artists -- Sagol 59 and HaDag
Nahash.
"What might be new is that more artists are
emphasizing their Jewishness in their content and marketing."
An example: Chutzpah, comprised of two suburban
New York natives and a Los Angeles actor, whose first single from a
self-titled CD and accompanying DVD is "Chanukah's Da Bomb."
50 SHEKEL, MESHUGGE KNIGHT
"A lot of people think because 'Chanukah's Da
Bomb' is the single, it's for Jewish people," said the group's
44-year-old dreadlocked member, David Scharff. "It's like saying
Woody Allen is for Jewish people. It's for everybody."
Formed by music producer Tor Hyams, Chutzpah
even enlisted 71-year-old veteran actor George Segal as "Dr. Dreck,"
its "coordinator."
"The lyrics are quite solid and informative, as
well as witty, sharp and funny," Segal said in a phone interview.
"That's what makes it work." Chutzpah treads the line between
seriousness and satire. Parody acts in Jewish hip-hop have been
common. Among them, 50 Shekel was a takeoff on 50 Cent. M.O.T. was
managed by Meshugge Knight, a takeoff on Suge Knight. And 2 Live
Jews featured Dr. Dreidle and Ice Berg.
"If you're looking for a tale of 'gangsta'
life, Jewish hip-hop might not be the place to start," said Alana
Newhouse, arts and culture editor at the Forward newspaper.
"The best Jewish hip-hop artists plumb serious
elements of Jewish history, but all are creating a new way to tell
the story of Jewish experience."
Beastie Boys are the most commercially
successful Jewish rap act, and the only one to achieve mainstream
success. But it was only recently that their Jewish backgrounds
began to be reflected in their lyrics.
Rabbi Schneier said Jewish hip-hop can resonate
with non-Jewish listeners, including many with similar views in
other areas.
"Jews view themselves as a minority when it
comes to issues of race and changing demographics, and on many
questions their responses are identical to those of African-American
and Latino respondents," Schneier said. "Hip-hop is a unifying force
that resonates with young people."
In the video for "Chanukah's Da Bomb," Chutzpah
cruises town in a Volvo with a roof-mounted menorah and raps that
Chanukah, "whichever way you spell it," is better than Christmas
because it lasts seven days longer.
"Humor (is) one of the only things the Jews had
when they were being oppressed for century after century," Hyams
said.
"The only difference between us and any other
hip-hop group is that they don't say their religions before they say
they're a hip-hop group," he continued. "We say it because we're
proud of it."
12/07/05 18:35 ET
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