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Pop fundamentalism

By JOSH KUN  |  March 2, 2006

The point, though, is not which Isaac Madonna is singing about but that she’s singing about an Isaac to begin with. Do we really want our pop stars to be God brokers, torch bearers of Testaments, Old or New? When Bono showed up at President Bush’s National Prayer Breakfast a few weeks ago, he sure seemed to think so. He stooped to God talk when he pleaded with 3M to remove policy restrictions that keep poor countries from accessing necessary medical supplies. “God will not accept that,” he said. “Mine won’t. Will yours?”

Madonna shouldn’t be singled out for her mystical awakening into the cult of the red bracelet when Bono is busy debating religious relativism with the president of the United States. But the fact that you can hear her Jewphilia on a pop station and then flip to alt-rock radio and hear Lubavitch Hasidism’s first Billboard-charting superstar, Matisyahu, demanding “Mosiach now!” on his “King Without a Crown” begs a larger question: how has Judaism become the new Christianity?

On “Roots in Stereo,” a duet between Matisyahu and Christian rap-rockers P.O.D. on the metal band’s latest Atlantic release, Testify, there doesn’t seem to be any difference between the two religions. In the song’s spliffy rude-boy blur where we’re all “the blood of God’s veins,” Jewish redemption and Christian redemption turn out to be the same thing after all.

Not that anyone seems to be listening too closely to what Matisyahu — once a Phish-following burnout named Matthew Miller who traded in his white-boy dreads for ultra-Orthodox Judaism — has been singing about. (Or for that matter, whether he’s even been on key.) He’s a Hasid on the mike! A black hat down for the boom bip! Just check the come-one-come-all circus-freak headlines: “Rebbe Rudeboy,” “Where Peter Tosh Meets Mazel Tov,” and of course, Stuff’s call to “check his circumcised rhymes.”

KEEPIN' IT KOSHER: "Treyf wine clouds the heart," Matisyahu sings on his new Epic album, Youth.Matisyahu’s novelty has overshadowed the fact that this “next-big-thing” is a convert to a hard-line, messianic branch of Judaism committed to strict interpretations of Jewish ritual and law. Lubavitcher Hasidim have their roots in late 18th-century Russia but have made the most noise in 20th-century Brooklyn under the leadership of their late rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneersohn (who many of them believe is the Messiah, due back on earth any day now). Matisyahu’s brethren aren’t just devout believers, though, they’re devout spiritual enforcers, best known for their aggressive attempts to get non-Orthodox Jews to come back to the fold and re-discover “real” Judaism. The pope has a car, the Lubavitch have vans: “Mitzvah mobiles.”

On Youth, Matisyahu’s eagerly awaited third album (out this Tuesday on Epic), there’s no listing of Orthodox law, no Sabbath candle-lighting checklist. But it is most certainly a product of someone who believes God, or G-d, is everywhere and ready to intervene. Bathed in surprisingly hollow production from Bill Laswell, Youth is loaded with standard born-again, Orthodox speak: man is weak, “the reflection of imperfection” and in need of God’s help; substance abuse should be avoided (i.e., “treyf wine clouds the heart”), and “God’s wisdom [is] revealed in a holy plan.”

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Comments
Pop fundamentalism
live at stubb's and his 1st album is still better than his new record, i.m.h.o.
By yo momma on 03/02/2006 at 9:16:59
Pop fundamentalism
I miss the days when religious or spiritually-driven songs spoke to power ("If you are a big tree, we are a small axe!", or "It's been a long, long time coming, but a change is gonna come. Oh yes it will."). Nowadays, with overt religiosity being the order of the day in circles of power, I hear someone outside the synagogue/mosque/pulpit invoking God's name, I check to make sure my wallet hasn't disappeared. For my money, one of the best religious pop songs ever made was Black Sabbath's "War Pigs". Yeah, I said it! Check it out: "Now in darkness world stops turning, ashes where the bodies burning. No more War Pigs have the power, Hand of God has struck the hour. Day of judgement, God is calling, on their knees the war pigs crawling. Begging mercies for their sins, Satan, laughing, spreads his wings. Oh lord, yeah!" Who'd a thunk? The Right Reverend Ozzie nailed it! Of course this was before he developed the penchant for chewing heads of bats and pigeons. Nevertheless, "War Pigs" brings on the fire and brimstone a la Revelations, but points the flamethrowers at the true halls of power and the sentiments that fill them. And the lyrical gasoline burns as hot now as it did when they first wrote it. Unfortunately, with Matisyahu and Madonna, they've taken on the soft targets (the consumeristic culture that butters their bread) and instead, fallen in lock-step or at least pander to those against whom their righteous pop fury should be unleashed. Great article! You hit the nail on the head. When folks are so quick to point the fundamentalism finger at Islam, your article's an apt reminder that to see the mote in another's eye we must first remove the plank from our own. Thanks again. http://afronaut.blogspot.com
By AFroNaut on 03/08/2006 at 9:11:03

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