Feb 21, 2006

White Plains boy who found both G-d and reggae


Nextbook: Melody Maker:
Though Matisyahu's talents are evident in concert, his albums leave me wanting. He's not without real skill, but on record his backing band is dull; the grooves are too tame and overly polite, and the basslines�perhaps reggae's most crucial sonic component�are positively timid. Matisyahu is devout not only in his love of God and Torah but in his fealty to the reggae genre, and his albums are reverent to the point of blandness. While songs like "Warrior" and "King Without a Crown" have memorable melodies, elsewhere he falls prey to the same affliction that plagues much underground "backpack" hip-hop, especially by white rappers: overcompensating on their props-paying to the point of tedium. His records suffer not from a lack of talent but from a lack of excitement.
(via Bloggerai)