Rolling Stone Magazine
There's one thing Hasidic reggae man Matisyahu won't do on his new U.S. tour: stage dive.

"There's a law that no man and woman may touch unless they're married," says the twenty-six-year-old MC. "I was caught doing it. So I checked, and, no, can't do that anymore -- there's women touching you for sure. That, and I also I got dropped once. I took, like, six people down."

His religious beliefs also prohibit Matisyahu -- who dresses in the traditional bekishe (long black robe), gartel (prayer belt) and black hat -- from shaking a woman's hand, though he did look this interviewer in the eye.

Matisyahu Spaces Out

Rolling Stone Magazine

There’s one thing Hasidic reggae man Matisyahu won’t do on his new U.S. tour: stage dive.

“There’s a law that no man and woman may touch unless they’re married,” says the twenty-six-year-old MC. “I was caught doing it. So I checked, and, no, can’t do that anymore — there’s women touching you for sure. That, and I also I got dropped once. I took, like, six people down.”

His religious beliefs also prohibit Matisyahu — who dresses in the traditional bekishe (long black robe), gartel (prayer belt) and black hat — from shaking a woman’s hand, though he did look this interviewer in the eye.

Fresh off his acclaimed Live at Stubb’s CD, the Brooklyn rapper is readying his second studio album, due in January, with help from famed world-music producer Bill Laswell. Backed by his band — guitarist Aaron Dugan, bassist Josh Werner and drummer Jonah David — Matisyahu has been laying down tracks in Laswell’s New Jersey recording studio.

“I think we go into uncharted territory on this album,” says Matisyahu, who freestyles, toasts and sings. “Bill is genius with dub reggae, which is like techno but more spacey.”

The album features two songs from Live at Stubb’s — “Warrior” and “King Without a Crown” — but the remaining tracks are new, including the first single, “Youth.” “It’s a song that has a stepper beat and a phat bass line — kind of like the Police,” Matisyahu explains. “The chorus goes into a hip-hop thing, and there’s a hard-rock solo in it.”

Matisyahu, who sometimes extracts or reinterprets lines from the Torah in his songs, looked to his own troubled youth for the single’s lyrics: “Fire with the flame of the youth/Got the freedom to choose/You better make the right move.” Born Matthew Miller, he skipped school and smoked pot while growing up in a reformed household in White Plains, New York, before becoming frum (devout) and moving to the nearby Hasidic community of Crown Heights.

“It’s the idea of a teenager not just rebelling for the sake of acting out,” Matisyahu, now married with children, says of the song, “but really becoming an adult and taking charge of the situation.”

Speaking of youthful indiscretions, a Matisyahu stage dive is captured in the video for “Youth,” but he says all isn’t as reckless as it appears. “We made sure [the audience] was all men.”

Matisyahu U.S. tour dates:

11/8: Louisville, KY, Headliners
11/9: Lawrence, KS, The Bottleneck
11/10: Englewood, CO, Gothic Theatre
11/12: Boulder, CO, Fox Theatre
11/13: Columbia, MO, Blue Note
11/15: Minneapolis, The Cabooze
11/16: Madison, WI, Barrymore Theatre
11/17: Chicago, Metro/Smart Bar
11/19: Cleveland, Odeon Concert Club
11/20: Columbus, OH, Newport Music Hall
12/24: Philadelphia, Theatre of Living Arts
12/25: Washington, DC, 9:30 Club
12/26: Boston, Paradise Rock Club
12/27: Killington, VT, The Picklebarrel
12/28: Buffalo, NY, The Showplace
12/29: Detroit, St. Andrews Hall

7 Comments

  • Music

    You gotta admit: There are a lot of things that seperate Matisyahu from Carlebach. The article above is a case in point.
    The questions is, what do they have in common?
    Just musing…

  • cally gal

    Does anyone know if mattisyahu is having a concert in southern california in the coming months?

  • Anonymous

    sense, in the MTV intervew matisyahu explains that "when all the hype and the singing and spur of the momentsness, there is just this amazing energy that is to much to keep on the stage, so you just want to jump off it" (thats about what he said).