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Hanukkah Music: Young, Hip Jews Leading A Makeover

First Posted: 12/08/2011 9:14 pm Updated: 12/09/2011 4:42 pm

By Lauren Markoe
Religion News Service

(RNS) Put on your boogie shoes -- the new Hanukkah songs are here!

What last year seemed like a happy coincidence has become a hip new Hanukkah tradition: groups of harmonizing young Jews releasing seriously Jewish, yet seriously danceable, songs for the Festival of Lights.

The Maccabeats, who scored more than 6 million hits on YouTube last year with a song about flipping potato latkes are back this year with a boppy reggae tune.

"Miracle" explores the spiritual meaning of Hanukkah, which commemorates the successful revolt led by Judah Maccabee against an ancient king who tried to quash Judaism.

Also coming out this week: an original Hanukkah song from the Fountainheads, an Israeli ensemble whose song for the Jewish New Year this September -- a quirky Jewish cover of the 2010 World Cup anthem -- garnered nearly 2 million YouTube hits.

For Hanukkah, the Fountainheads wrote "Light Up The Night," a hip hop/gospel tribute to religious freedom, with both English and Hebrew lyrics.

Jews worldwide are embracing these culturally contemporary Jewish music videos. Mark Kligman, a professor of Jewish musicology at Hebrew Union College in New York, couldn't be happier.

"I met the Maccabeats and I said, 'I really want to hug you, because you're the ones who are going to keep my kids Jewish,'" said Kligman.

He said the Maccabeats, Fountainheads, Aish Ha Torah, The Groggers and a host of college a capella groups are breaking ground with Jewish music in a different way than the icons of Jewish music of the last generation.

Musicians like Jeff Klepper and the late Debbie Friedman -- who brought folk and other contemporary music into the synagogue -- felt they had to justify their departure from tradition, he said.

With the Maccabeats, "there's no apologizing," Kligman continued. It's as if they're saying: We're so comfortable with being Jewish that we don't really have to think about it.

The Maccabeats are all students or graduates from Yeshiva University in New York City. Yeshiva students, who tend to practice a modern Orthodox form of Judaism, study secular subjects and Jewish law.

Maccabeats director Immanuel Shalev, now in law school, said he and his friends were a "nerdy Jewish a capella group" four years ago. "Candlelight" brought in offers to sing all over the world -- from megachurches in Texas to a Jewish school in Hong Kong.

The Maccabeats' ode to latkes -- a takeoff of British pop star Taio Cruz's "Dynamite" -- caught on in part because the melody gets stuck in your head. But for Jews, Shalev said, the song hits more chords.

"It can be difficult to be a Jew on Christmas," he said. "And when you have something to rally around as a Jew, it can be really exciting."

That happened on national television in 1994, Kligman said, when comedian Adam Sandler sang "The Hanukkah Song" on "Saturday Night Live," listing celebrities that many people didn't know were Jewish.

Emerging Jewish groups today can thank Sandler, Kligman said.

"That really carved out a space for people to be excited and to celebrate being Jewish," he said. "It used to be that you were proud to be Jewish, but you kept it in your back pocket."

This year, the Maccabeats hope fans will rally around a Hanukkah song that's a little more soulful than last year's tune.

At the invitation of Hasidic reggae rapper Matisyahu -- a Jewish musical phenomenon in his own right -- they turned out an a capella version of his "Miracle." The song refers to the miracle of the Hanukkah story: when the victorious Jews reclaimed the temple in Jerusalem, they had enough oil to light their lamp for one night but it lasted for eight.

The Fountainheads see their last video's success as a bit of a miracle, and have also been invited to perform in venues around the world. Like the Maccabeats, they began singing together as a diversion.

The group spends most of their days studying Jewish and secular subjects at Ein Prat Academy, a Jerusalem school that bridges the year between army service and college.

Last year, an Ein Prat teacher noticed that many of his students had musical talent, and suggested they make a video. Rewriting pop songs for the Jewish holidays, they made videos for Hanukkah, Purim and Passover, and then struck Internet gold with "Dip Your Apple" for Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.

And though many of the videos are shot to maximize goofiness -- the Rosh Hashanah one includes "Angry Birds" and a mock battle between Darth Vader and Luke Skywalker -- the Fountainheads are also hoping to deliver a message.

"We do our best to present a new Israeli-Jewish identity," said Shani Lachmish, a lead Fountainhead singer who studies Jewish philosophy and drama therapy, "one that transcends divisions and highlights the things we all share in common."

But there's got to be some competitive spirit, right? Both the Fountainheads and the Maccabeats are sending their Hanukkah videos into cyberspace at almost exactly the same time. Who will get the most hits?

There's no competition, both groups insisted, because they?re trying to promote the same idea.

"Adhering to your faith and tradition is something that doesn't have to be old and archaic," Shalev said. "You can take something modern and infuse it with Jewish belief."

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11:52 AM on 12/14/2011
Here is another video by a jewish acapella group called Pella. This video sings about all the Jewish holidays to the famous tune "Tonight Tonight" by Hot Chelle Rae
12:00 PM on 12/14/2011
Pella Productions Presents - Holiday Party (Tonight Tonight)
12:01 PM on 12/14/2011
sorry not getting this comment thing right. type into youtube Pella Productions Presents - Holiday Party (Tonight Tonight) to see the video.
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Anybodyseenthepopos
אני כלום בלעדיהם
12:45 PM on 12/14/2011
This should help...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYmLJ8GSsjk

It's cute. Not my style, but very cute.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edwardandersons
The Lord is my Shepard
09:29 AM on 12/14/2011
Wow and they performed for Obama? Did any of our singers perform for him when he lite the pagan christmas tree? How come there is no Nativity scene on the white house lawn but there is a giant menorah which is a religious symbol allowed for the JEws. I thought it was seperatrion of church and state; why not have both if one is allowed. I mean the nativity is announcing the birth of God where the menorah is celebrating war and victory by the jews..
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Anybodyseenthepopos
אני כלום בלעדיהם
12:56 PM on 12/14/2011
"the menorah is celebratin­g war and victory by the Jews"

Actually the menorah is celebrating God keeping the light in the Temple burning for a full eight days. That is the miracle of Hannukah.

And yes there was a war fought against oppression and for religious freedom. And yes the Jews won. And yes that is the history. But that is not the miracle commemorated by the lighting of the Menorah.

As far as equivalency goes... How many Hannukah songs do you hear on the radio? And how many Christmas songs do you think American Jews know by heart? And why do we know all the words to your songs? And you know maybe the dreidle song and Adam Sandler?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edwardandersons
The Lord is my Shepard
02:19 PM on 12/14/2011
I understand your point but you can't blame anyone for not putting hannaka music on the radio..Its a free country so the lack of songs is only because Jewish people have not penned any songs to be played. Also you have to look at American society which is majority Christian while the jewish population is only 2 percent. If I went to Israel I bet I wouldnt hear Christmas music playing even though there is a small minority of Christians that live there. Did you ever hear the Hymn of the Republic? The song centers around our lord Jesus and America; the beleif in Jesus was dominant among the first settlers. The christmas tree is just a pagan symbol and does not represent the true meaning of Christmas which was the birth of our Lord Jesus. The Menorah is a religious symbol and with 2 percent population it gets to stand huge on the white house lawn while the Nativity is not shown with more then an 80 percent Christian population. Its really not fair; we are constantly being pushed to seperate church and state and in the case of the giant menorah this is not true.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edwardandersons
The Lord is my Shepard
09:24 AM on 12/14/2011
Also its sung by a bunch of nerdy geeky kids...Couldnt they find more cool looking kids to perform? Maybe leave the voices and have someone limpsink.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edwardandersons
The Lord is my Shepard
09:22 AM on 12/14/2011
I think it stinks...Nothig is better then good old Christmas music..Nice effort though..Also is Hannaka a celbration of a bloody war with the Jews being victorious/? It sure is similar to Jesus Birthday which celebrates the birth of our Messiah. Jesus would never partake in war he was all about love, peace on earth and spreading Gods word.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JewishPhysician
fraternity, trust, discourse
01:00 PM on 12/13/2011
Hannukah time. Bring out the Supersized menorahs....
Here is a little commentary:
http://heresyandgoodfortune.blogspot.com/2011/12/supersized-menorahs.html
07:13 AM on 12/10/2011
I think it is cool.
03:06 AM on 12/10/2011
My Bubbe could sing some of the most beautiful songs in Yiddish though as a child I couldn't understand them. She had such a wonderful voice and recorded some records in the 40's. I had some of them but lost them in a flood in the mid 90's. She lived to be 93 years old, and was one of the best cooks I have ever seen. I wish she would have written her recipes down, but everything she cooked was in her head. She had a heart as big as the Earth.
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sibyl9
Cloaking Device Engaged
10:46 PM on 12/09/2011
Entertaining video but dated, like the 80's, don't you think?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hawaiianstile
all hail the balance of nature.
08:26 PM on 12/09/2011
yeah now you jewish folks are stepping up. a giant fire shooting manora is way cooler than any christmas tree.
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sibyl9
Cloaking Device Engaged
10:36 PM on 12/09/2011
You're so patronizing and you don't even realize it. Get over your self-loathing guilt first, be proud of who you are and then join the adult conversation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hawaiianstile
all hail the balance of nature.
12:48 AM on 12/11/2011
what on earth are you going on about, are you dizzy or something?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edwardandersons
The Lord is my Shepard
09:31 AM on 12/14/2011
What about a beautifll Nativity scene which shows the Blessed mother the baby Jesus and Josph with the three sheppards...Which could be lite up nice.. That would be better then a pagan christmas tree.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Adam Valen Levinson
06:15 PM on 12/09/2011
Rock on. Even in Abu Dhabi there are giant christmas trees, but I'm missing a good old Hanukkah bush. Props to both awesome groups
07:44 PM on 12/09/2011
Dude, let be real... do you really think a menorah would fly well in Abu Dhabi.? I am surprised with the Christmas tree.
klwarner
Third wheel legend, always in the way
02:41 PM on 12/09/2011
I thought the idea was that Hanukkah was the more sacred, less corrupted holiday?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
03:04 PM on 12/09/2011
"Sacred" can be perceived "joyless" If faith does not make you sing and shout for joy, what value is it?

David danced and sang from the solemn depths. Even as a Catholic, I love his psalms more than any other prayers.
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smcircle
If we don't stand up for us who will?
09:55 PM on 12/11/2011
Many religions in the past have lost their following as they lost their luster. There is nothing wrong with joy in faith. We believe it was God who gave us humor and the facial muscles to smile...
12:01 PM on 12/09/2011
Hey HuffPost... did you folks append that Hanukkah video without even watching it?

You must have, as the video never addresses how to celebrate Hanukkah.

You'd know that if you'd watched it.
12:15 AM on 12/09/2011
I have a little dreidel
I made it out of clay
And when it's dry and ready
Then dreidel I shall play!

Oh - dreidel, dreidel, dreidel
I made it out of clay
And when it's dry and ready
Then dreidel I shall play!

It has a lovely body
With legs so short and thin
And when my dreidel's tired
It drops and then I win!

Oh - dreidel, dreidel, dreidel
I made it out of clay
And when it's dry and ready
Then dreidel I shall play!

My dreidel's always playful
It loves to dance and spin
A happy game of dreidel
Come play now, let's begin!

Oh - dreidel, dreidel, dreidel
I made it out of clay
And when it's dry and ready
Then dreidel I shall play!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
03:14 PM on 12/09/2011
That rocks. If you're five, I suppose.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smcircle
If we don't stand up for us who will?
09:58 PM on 12/11/2011
It is not generally the adults who sing it but many know it from childhood...
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Adam Valen Levinson
06:14 PM on 12/09/2011
I didn't know anyone knew more than the first verse. I didn't know there was more than a first verse.

Bravo.
01:16 AM on 12/10/2011
You can add more ryhmes, like

"I have a little Dreidel I made it out of wood
and when it lands on Gimel, my winnings are reall good!"
or out of Plastic... Fantastic...

I mean lets face it, most people don't have clay dreidels.
03:10 AM on 12/10/2011
Origins of the Dreidel

A game similar to the dreidel game was popular during the rule of Antiochus. During this period Jews were not free to openly practice their religion, so when they gathered to study Torah they would bring a top with them. If soldiers appeared, they would quickly hide what they were studying and pretend to be playing a gambling game with the top.