Search - Matisyahu :: Live at Stubb's

Live at Stubb's
Matisyahu
Live at Stubb's
Genre: International Music
 
Although reggae's religious overtones are often overshadowed by the music's ties to ganja and the hippie movement, there are some socially active or religious leaning artists out there. One of the newest comes in the unlik...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Matisyahu
Title: Live at Stubb's
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Epic
Release Date: 6/26/2006
Album Type: Import
Genre: International Music
Style: Reggae
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 828767577326, 828767577326

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Although reggae's religious overtones are often overshadowed by the music's ties to ganja and the hippie movement, there are some socially active or religious leaning artists out there. One of the newest comes in the unlikely figure of a young Hasidic Jew named Matisyahu. Singing with a slight ghetto patois, in Yiddish, and even displaying considerable beat-box skills, the New Yorker is at his best when he works himself into fits of righteous indignation and Old Testament fervor (the limits of his vocal range are laid bare when he croons on ballads). The lean three-piece band on this live recording, his second album, is aerodynamic and flexible, able to do the slow reggae groove or rock out with ferocity. After 12 tracks of stripped-down reggae, however, the music tends to blend into one long groove. Nonetheless, there is an undeniable urgency in this live recording that comes through loud and clear, making it a live document of note by one of reggae's most interesting new figures. --Tad Hendrickson
 

CD Reviews

Not a big fan of Reggae, but still one of my favorite albums
Migzilla | Arizona | 01/17/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I don't really care as to whether or not Matisyahu is a legit Reggae musician or a "parody act". I think the beats and lyrics are great, and best of all, very inspiring. Yes, the music is religious, but not at all in an annoying way. The music isn't telling you that you're going to hell if you don't do such and such. It's also not making a mockery of religious texts by making them fit into a genre of music where they don't belong. I generally don't rely on music for inspiration, but this music does it for me anyway.



I'm not too sure how much this music would appeal to people are not really spiritual or perhaps not fans of the Jewish religion. No, the music isn't judgmental, but the message is very Jewish (though it most certainly applies to all mankind)."