Become a Member
Music

Interview: Matisyahu

Why the shtetl reggae star lost his black hat

October 8, 2009 09:53
Matisyahu’s new album explores pop, rock and hip hop. He says traditional Jewish music doesn’t suit him and he wants to avoid “the insularity of the shtetl”

By

Alex Kasriel,

Alex Kasriel

3 min read

Critics might have initially dismissed him as a novelty act, but five years after Chasidic pop star Matisyahu emerged on the scene, he has proved he is not just grabbing attention because of his peyot and black hat.

Popular with the music press, he has picked up thousands of devoted fans across the world, making huge sales and regularly topping the Billboard charts in the United States. This success cannot be just because he does not conform with the usual swaggering rock and reggae stars that normally grace the stage and MTV screen.

“The Jewish world is becoming fully integrated with the ideas of the normal world. They feed off each other,” Matisyahu (born Matthew Miller) explains of his cross-over appeal. “In the past, people from a religious persuasion wouldn’t be exposed to current music. Also, you didn’t have so many people becoming religious. You have got a lot more people who didn’t used to be religious who have been exposed to other things.”

Unlike his previous records which are pure reggae, his new album, Light, draws from a wider range of influences, taking in pop, hip hop and rock. One Day, the catchy single taken from it, is as accessible as anything by the Black Eyed Peas or Wyclef Jean. “It’s kind of all over the place stylistically. It’s the way I wanted to make a record for a long time. I have always been into different styles,” says Matisyahu, who made the album in Jamaica with his close friend, acoustic rock artist Trevor Hall.