Jews have helped shape the first 50 years of hip-hop
From
Rick Rubin to Doja Cat, Jews have helped shape the first 50 years of hip-hop
BY ANDREW ESENSTEN AUGUST 11,
2023 9:00 AM
Clockwise from top
left: The Beastie Boys, Doja Cat and Rick Rubin, shown with Russell Simmons,
are a few of the prominent Jewish figures from the first 50 years of hip-hop.
(Getty Images; Design by Mollie Suss)
(JTA) — Like many parents, Mickey and Linda Rubin
indulged their only child Ricky’s various hobbies — magic, photography, music —
while he was growing up in the 1970s on Long Island. Ultimately, they hoped he
would set his artistic interests aside and choose the sensible career of an
attorney.
Ricky famously stuck
with music.
In 1983, when he was a
junior at New York University, he borrowed $5,000 from his parents to record a
song by a local rapper, T La Rock, and release it on his new label, Def Jam.
The song, “It’s Yours,” was a hit and caught the attention of a
businessman, Russell Simmons. The two would join forces and turn Def Jam into a
hit factory. As a producer, Rick Rubin would go on to work with some of the
most celebrated rappers of all time, including LL Cool J, Run-DMC, and Public
Enemy.
“When I started Def
Jam,” Rubin told the New York Times
Magazine in
2007, “I was the only white guy in the hip-hop world.”
He certainly was not,
but he was one of the only white Jews making rap records until
Michael “Mike D” Diamond, Adam “MCA” Yauch, and Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz —
better known as the Beastie Boys — burst onto the scene. Rubin produced and
released the group’s 1986 debut album, “Licensed to Ill,” which became the
first rap album to reach No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart.
“If you want to talk
about a singular Jewish contribution to hip-hop, it’d be Rick,” said Dan Charnas, a journalist and arts professor at Rubin’s
alma mater, in an interview. “Instead of hip-hop being rapping over disco
instrumentals, he conceived of it as sonic collage art.”
Fifty years ago, on
Aug. 11, 1973, hip-hop was born (or so the origin story goes) when Jamaican
Americans Cindy Campbell and her brother, a DJ who went by Kool Herc, hosted
a back-to-school dance
party in the
recreation room of their Bronx apartment building. In its early years, rap was
dismissed as street music by most music industry gatekeepers. It would take six
years after that Bronx party for a rap record to get airplay on pop radio
(Sugarhill Gang’s “Rapper’s Delight”).
Fast forward to 2023,
and hip-hop is ubiquitous — not just on Spotify and TikTok, but across pop
culture, from television to fashion.
Over the last five
decades, many Jewish rappers from different backgrounds and nationalities have
left their mark on hip-hop culture, from Drake to Doja Cat to Mac Miller to Nissim Black, to name just a few. In the early 2000s,
religiously-observant artists such as Y-Love and Matisyahu carved out a niche
for rap infused with Jewish wisdom and spirituality. Today, there are a number
of rappers who make Judaism a prominent part of their stage personas, from
Kosha Dillz to Lil Dicky to BLP Kosher; the latter dropped an album on Aug. 4
titled “Bars Mitzvah.” There is also a vibrant, multilingual
hip-hop scene in Israel.
RELATED: The 10 most influential
Jewish rappers of the past 50 years
But the biggest
contributions that Jews have made collectively to hip-hop may have been on the
business side, as managers and record label executives.
“White people have
played more of a role on the business side than as artists because hip-hop is,
for the most part, a Black art form,” explained Charnas, who worked in A&R
(which involves seeking out new artists to sign) at Rubin’s American Recordings
label in the early 1990s.
In his 2010 book “The
Big Payback: The History of the Business of Hip-Hop,” Charnas shares the
stories of the record label executives who commercialized hip-hop, including
several Jewish ones: Roy and Jules Rifkind, owners of the label that released
one of the first rap records in 1979, “King Tim III (Personality Jock)” by
Fatback Band; Aaron Fuchs, founder of Tuff City Records, the first rap label to
secure a major-label distribution deal; Tom Silverman, founder of Tommy Boy
Records, whose roster of musicians included Queen Latifah, Coolio, De La Soul,
and Naughty By Nature; Jerry Heller, co-founder of Ruthless Records with rapper
Eazy-E; and Julie Greenwald, Def Jam’s head of marketing in the ’90s (who now
runs the Atlantic Music Group).
Fuchs, who launched
Tuff City in 1981, said by phone that he began working with hip-hop artists
such as The Cold Crush Brothers at least a year before Rubin started Def Jam.
“I left my career as a
writer and decided to run a record company on the belief that this Black music,
like every other Black music in history, would be worth codifying,” he said. He
later mentored Rubin and even produced some songs himself using the pseudonym
Oliver Shalom, a play on the Hebrew honorific for the dead, “alav ha-shalom”
(“peace be upon him”).
At 75, Fuchs still
runs Tuff City and plans to release a four-part vinyl compilation of classic
rap songs to which he owns the rights later this year. He described hip-hop as
“a very, very, very important American expression.”
“I knew it would last,
but I didn’t know that it would revolutionize music the world over,” he said.
In response to a
direct message on Twitter, Chuck D of the influential group Public Enemy shared
the names of the Jews he believes have made the biggest impact in hip-hop, in
addition to Rubin: the Beastie Boys; MC Serch of interracial rap group 3rd Bass;
Lyor Cohen, the son of Israeli immigrants who started as Run-DMC’s road manager
and went on to run Def Jam after Rubin’s departure; and Bill Adler, Def Jam’s
onetime director of publicity who helped Public Enemy weather an antisemitism controversy in 1989.
Def Jam Records
publicist Bill Adler introduces Rapper Chuck D, left, of Public Enemy, as the
latter prepares to fire bandmate Professor Griff for making antisemitic
remarks, June 21, 1989. (Al Pereira/Getty Images/Michael Ochs Archives)
“What was interesting,”
Chuck D wrote in a direct message, “was that everyone didn’t necessarily get
along.” He described the 1980s rap scene as a “melting pot of personality, ego,
pioneering, money, race, and everything else.”
Beyond the boardroom,
Jews have also played a significant role in hip-hop as talent managers. Among
the best-known are Heller (N.W.A.), Paul Rosenberg (Eminem, as well as Jewish
rappers Action Bronson and The Alchemist), Leila Steinberg (Tupac Shakur, Earl
Sweatshirt), and Todd Moscowitz (Gucci Mane).
Managers both inside
and outside of hip-hop have long been vilified for profiting off of their
artists’ creativity and labor, or worse. Some believe Heller stole from the
members of N.W.A., but there is no evidence to support
the claim.
Steinberg’s story is different: She accepted very little money while working
as Shakur’s first manager
in Northern California because she did not want to be perceived as a white person
taking undue credit for a Black person’s achievements.
“Back then, I really
wanted to participate [in hip-hop] as an activist and couldn’t make sense of
this being about money and business,” she said in an interview with the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency earlier this year. “I’ve reshaped a lot of my thinking — if
you’re not making money, you can’t make change in the world.”
In the realm of
hip-hop media, two Israeli cousins — Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus — were
responsible for producing the classic breakdance-themed musicals “Breakin’” and “Breakin’ 2: Electric
Boogaloo” in
1984. Keith Naftaly was the program manager who turned Bay Area radio station
KMEL into the best place to hear new rap music in the late ’80s (he is now the
head of A&R at RCA). Peter Rosenberg’s voice can be heard every morning on
one of the biggest rap stations in the country, New York’s Hot 97.
Many of the culture’s
most enthusiastic chroniclers, it turns out, are members of the tribe: Jonathan
Shecter and Dave Mays, who co-founded the groundbreaking hip-hop magazine The
Source — the most popular music
magazine in
the United States in the late ’90s — as undergraduates at Harvard; DJ Vlad
(born Vladimir Lyubovny), whose YouTube channel features interviews with numerous
rappers and has 5.5 million subscribers; Nardwuar (John
Ruskin), a Canadian journalist whose unpredictable interviews with rappers
receive millions of views on YouTube; and ItsTheReal (Eric and Jeff Rosenthal),
who recently released a deeply-researched podcast about the
heyday of rap blogs. And then there’s Charnas himself, who is 55 and was one of the
first writers at The Source and a founding father of hip-hop journalism. (The
album that made him fall in love with hip-hop: Public Enemy’s “It Takes a
Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back.”)
Charnas connects
Jewish involvement in so many different aspects of hip-hop culture to the
historical alliance between Jews and Black people.
“I think we were
around because of our place in the American totem pole, and because of our
cultural affinities,” he said. “We had geographical proximity to each other, so
that has a lot to do with it. Obviously, Blacks and Jews were aligned
politically.”
He added there has
never been a “Jewish cabal” running the show — a charge that a small number of
big-name rappers, including most recently Ye, formerly known as
Kanye West —
have made. In 2008, Jay-Z and Russell Simmons recorded a PSA about antisemitism geared toward hip-hop artists and fans
that was produced by Rabbi Marc Schneier’s Foundation for Ethnic Understanding.
Since then, Ice Cube, Nick Cannon, Jay Electronica, and, yes, even Jay-Z have all found
themselves at the center of antisemitism controversies. (On a track on his 2017
album “4:44,” Jay-Z asked rhetorically, “You ever wonder why Jewish people own
all the property in America?” He defended the lyric as an obvious exaggeration.)
“Jewish people have
found important places and purchases in the business, but no more so than any
other white folks,” Charnas said.
Y-Love, the
trailblazing Black and Jewish rapper who is known for rhyming in Hebrew and
Aramaic — and who, at age 45, calls himself “the OG of Jewish hip-hop,”
meaning “the original gangster,” or the elder statesman — said the rappers who
have been accused of antisemitism are not saying anything original. They are
simply parroting ideas circulating in American society at large, he argued.
“There needs to be a
moratorium on the phrase ‘Black antisemitism,” he said. “It’s the same
antisemitism.” The best response to the hate, he said, is for Black Jewish
rappers with huge fan bases such as Drake and Doja Cat to stand up and say
publicly: “When you talk about Jews, you’re talking about me.”
One of the positive
legacies of hip-hop, he noted, is that it has allowed Black Jewish rappers like
himself to get on stages and screens and show the world just how diverse Jews
are. “I think that through embracing hip-hop, the Jewish community added a lot
to its own continuity,” he said.
Where is hip-hop
headed in the next 50 years?
“As the barrier to
entry to putting music out there gets lower, we are going to see more and more
people putting tracks out that speak to them, and more managers that are
willing to help them do it,” Y-Love said, adding, “Maybe one day we’ll see a
Jewish hip-hop category at the Grammys.”
Comments
Post a Comment