The Diaspora Yeshiva Band (Hebrew: להקת ישיבת התפוצות) was an American-Israeli OrthodoxJewish rock band founded at the Diaspora Yeshiva on Mount Zion, Jerusalem, by baal teshuva students from the United States. In existence from 1975 to 1983, the band infused rock and bluegrass music with Jewish lyrics, creating a style of music it called "Chassidic rock"[1] or "Country and Eastern".[2][3] The band had an international following, having become famous after winning three Israel Chassidic Festivals, in 1977, 1978, and 1980 and produced many hit songs. They were very popular with Jewish Youth Groups and tourists in the early to mid-1980s, and became very well known in Jerusalem for their Saturday-night concerts at King David Tomb.[4] DYB had a considerable influence on contemporary Jewish religious music, inspiring later bands such as Blue Fringe, 8th Day, Reva L'Sheva, Soulfarm, the Moshav Band, and Shlock Rock. Fifteen years after it disbanded, band leader Avraham Rosenblum revived the band under the name Avraham Rosenblum & Diaspora and produced several more albums.
Background
The Diaspora Yeshiva (ישיבת התפוצות) was founded in 1965 by Rabbi Mordechai Goldstein,[5] an alumnus of the Chofetz Chaim Yeshiva in Queens, New York, and a colleague of Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach.[6] It was originally named "Yeshiva Toras Yisrael", the name of its American charity,[7] and with the influx of students from the Diaspora after it moved to Mount Zion, Jerusalem following the Six Day War in 1967, it became known as "Diaspora Yeshiva", which the later Israeli charity registration as "Yeshivat Hatfuzot Toras Yisrael" reflects.[8] The current Rosh Yeshiva is Rabbi Yitzchak Goldstein.
Diaspora Yeshiva was established as an outreach yeshiva for baalei teshuva.[6][9] Unlike traditional rabbinic academies, the yeshiva reached out to young Jewish men who had never been exposed to traditional Torah or Talmud study. It offered introductory and intermediate courses together with acclimation to an Orthodox Jewish lifestyle.[6]
As a long-time student of Yeshivas Chofetz Chaim under Rabbi Henoch Leibowitz, Rabbi Mordechai Goldstein established the Diaspora Yeshiva according to the derech (way) of Yeshiva Chofetz Chaim, following in the footsteps of the Alter of Slabodka and Rabbi Yisroel Salanter, the founder of the Mussar movement, according to which the Diaspora Yeshiva continues to operate to this day, including that it is more important to work on oneself and to become a mentch than it is to adopt a particular dress-code, so students are not required to wear black and white, but may come as they are and feel comfortable to grow at their own pace.[10]
Numerous students were professional or semi-professional musicians, and several musical collaborations were spawned in the yeshiva dorms.[11] In 1975 student Avraham Rosenblum, a rock guitarist who led his own bands in Philadelphia and New York in the late 1960s founded the Diaspora Yeshiva Band, along with Moshe Shur and Ben Zion Solomon.[11][12] The band was conceived as an outreach tool to college and hippie students and, later, post-hippie seekers, using theirJewish rock music to draw hundreds of them into the milieu of Torah study.[13][11]
The yeshiva itself offers programs ranging from basic Judaism to advanced Talmud – employing a methodology based on Ramchal (see Torah study § The Luzzatto method) – and emphasizes mussar, or character development. Its core programs range from three month introductory programs to six year programs, intermediate to advanced.[14]
Machon Roni,[15] a women's Torah seminary, operates in parallel.
It was established with similar goals to the yeshiva "to guide young Jewish women on their journey of teshuva".
It has become "a leading seminary" for women seeking Jewish conversion.
History
The Diaspora Yeshiva Band staged its first concert at the Beit Ha'Am hall in the Nachlaot neighborhood of Jerusalem during Hanukkah 1975.[11] After that, the band became well known for its weekly Saturday-night concerts held in a room adjacent to David's Tomb (located in the same courtyard as the yeshiva) on Mount Zion.[11][16][17] These concerts attracted secular American, British, and French youth; yeshiva and seminary students; tourists, and Israeli soldiers.[11] Band members continued to perform with the group even after they had married and begun studying in kollel.[11]
The band released its first album in 1976.[12][18] In 1977 they were invited to compete in the Chassidic Song Festival, an Israeli competition that ran from 1969 to 1984 and broadcast on national television.[11] Diaspora Yeshiva Band was the first yeshiva band to perform at the largely secular music event, and won first prize for its song "Hu Yiftach Libeinu" (He will open our hearts).[11] Interviews in the general media followed, increasing name recognition and visitors to the Saturday-night concerts.[11] The band was invited back for the 1978 Chassidic Song Festival, and won first prize again for its entry "Malchutcha" (Your sovereignty).[11]
The band embarked on its first North American concert tour in 1979, visiting 26 cities.[11] It went on to tour the U.S., Canada, Europe, and South Africa on five additional tours.[18][19] The band was highly popular on college campuses in the early to mid-1980s.[12][20]
In the 1980s, Lynyrd Skynyrd drummer Artimus Pyle came to study in the Diaspora Yeshiva for several years.[21] He played with a later band and bequeathed his drum set to the yeshiva.[21][22] In 1987 the Diaspora Yeshiva Band performed and were interviewed on MTV's Musical Passport series, Rock Israel, as part of the coverage of the visit of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers to Israel and Egypt.[23][24] Band leader Avraham Rosenblum was filmed accompanying Tom Petty, Benmont Tench, and Roger McGuinn at the Western Wall.[25]
The Diaspora Yeshiva Band released a total of six albums.[11][26] They disbanded in 1983[2][26] as its members began pursuing both solo careers and careers in Torah learning and outreach.[11]
In 2014, Rosenblum, Simcha Abramson, Gedaliah Goldstein, Ruby Harris, and Menachem Herman performed at the HASC 27 concert at Lincoln Center.[11][29] That same year, the group held another reunion concert at Congregation Shomrei Emunah in Baltimore, where Rosenblum is a member.[19]
Avraham Rosenblum & Diaspora
In 1998 band leader Avraham Rosenblum and his son, drummer Moe Rosenblum, revived the band under the name Avraham Rosenblum & Diaspora and produced the album Jerusalem is Calling.[28][30][31] Moe went on to produce The Diaspora Collection (2000), a digitally-remastered double-CD of Diaspora Yeshiva Band hits, and Kedem (2003), an album featuring solo material by Avraham Rosenblum.[28][30][32]
Music style
"They started putting their music talents together in a religious way ... You remember that song "Jeremiah Was a Bullfrog"? Well, it was the same sound, but they were singing about how wonderful God is".
The band members viewed their music as a means of expressing their newfound connection to God, the Jewish people, and the Land of Israel in a medium that they were familiar with.[2][33] Their arrangements reflected the musical trends of secular American culture in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[11] The band's repertoire included rock, soft rock, acid rock, country, bluegrass, blues, folk, jazz, klezmer, and Yiddish ballads.[18][20][34][35][36]Strom describes their music as blending "a San Francisco rock 'n' roll sound with Israeli, Middle Eastern, and Hasidic music".[12]
The lyrics, in contrast, expressed Jewish values. Lyrics were both original and drawn from the Torah and Book of Psalms.[18][26] The band sang in Hebrew, Yiddish, and English.[1] Their on-stage presence also belied the traditional rock band image: they sported full beards, payot, and tzitzit,[36] and dressed in the dark-colored attire typical of yeshiva students.[2][11]
Influence
The Diaspora Yeshiva Band was considered an influential group in the history of contemporary Jewish religious music.[37] Bands that name them as an inspiration include Blue Fringe,[38]8th Day,[39] and Shlock Rock.[40][41] Besides Rosenblum, other original band members who pursued solo careers include Ruby Harris, founder of the Ruby Harris Electric Violin Blues Band in Chicago,[42]Adam Wexler, co-founder of Reva L'Sheva,[43] and Rabbi Moshe Shur, founder of the Moshe Shur Band and Moshe Shur and Sons.[44] Sons of original band member Ben Zion Solomon include Noah Solomon of Soulfarm, Yehuda Solomon of Moshav Band, and Nachman Solomon of Hamakor.[3][45][46]
Personnel
The six founding members of the Diaspora Yeshiva Band were:[11][22]
Student-musicians who played with the band at different times between 1973 and 1986 include: Beryl and Ted Glaser, Shimon Green, Isser Blum, Amram Hakohen, Menachem Herman, Yochanan Lederman, Tzvi Miller, Yosil Rosenzweig, Chaim-Dovid Saracik, and Rabbi Moshe Shur.[22]
^Lipman, Steve (26 March 2004). "Like Father, Like Son". The Jewish Week. Archived from the original on 29 March 2015. Retrieved 16 November 2014. (subscription required)
^Freund, Michael (11 November 2003). "New Jewish Band Makes Waves". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 29 March 2015. Retrieved 16 November 2014. (subscription required)
^Jacobson, Ben (25 March 2004). "Solomon Keeps On Schlockin'". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 29 March 2015. Retrieved 16 November 2014. (subscription required)
^Jacobson, Ben (13 January 2006). "Two Start-Up Bands Step Up". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 29 March 2015. Retrieved 16 November 2014. (subscription required)