Media Appearances and Interviews

February 2012 interview on Guardian Sounds Jewish Podcast

January 8 2012 appearance on Metal Evolution Episode 8 (Thrash metal)

November 4 2011 interview on BBC Breakfast

October 7 2011 interview on Little Atoms podcast 

August 16 2011 co-hosting and interview on The Governor’s Ball podcast

Quoted in March 22 2011 article in the New York Jewish Week

March 27 2011 interview on the podcast Cartoon Kippah

Quoted in 7 January 2011 article in Haaretz

July 28 2010 interview with myself and Ben Gidley in the Jewish Chronicle.

November 2009 interview for documentary ‘Appetite for Destruction: Der Sound der Gewalt’ WD3 radio, Germany.

August 2009 interview with Esoteriic webzine

June 2009 interview with International Day of Slayer website

May 2009 interview on Eurovision with Liverpool City Talk FM.

April 2009 interview on The Guardian Sounds Jewish Podcast

January 2009 in collection ‘The Spiritual Significance of Music’ edited by Justin St Vincent

October 2008 with Liverpool City Talk FM.

August 2008 with Treehouse of Of Death

June 2008 with Baltimore’s Jewish radio program, Shalom USA on AM1370-WVIE

June 2008 in JTA article (quoted in a longer article)

July 2007 in The Listener magazine (New Zealand) (quoted in a longer article)

May 2007 with Terrorizer magazine.

February 2007 on Sunday Night Safran, Triple J radio (Australia). [Click here to download a recording of the show]

January 2007 with Miasma magazine (Finland).

May 2006 with BBC Radio 5 Live, BBC Radio Ulster and BBC Radio Hereford and Worcester on Heavy Metal and the success of Lordi in the 2006 Eurovision song contest.

May 2006 on the BBC World Service ‘Reporting Religion’ on Jews and popular music.

May 12 2006 with the Jewish Chronicle.

2006 interview in the film ‘Metal: A Headbanger’s Journey’

 

 

Eliyahu Dali's Metal Prayer

I'm impossible to please, really I am. I spent much of my life yearning for Jewish metal, but when it finally comes along I find I'm just as finicky, fussy and critical as I am about any other kind of music.

So Joel alerted me a couple of days ago to a piece in the Jerusalem Post about the Israeli musician Eliyahu Dali. Dali is making metal versions of 'classic' Jewish prayers and will at some point release an album called 'Metal Prayer'.

Listening to some of it online, it's clear that Dali is a decent musician in the prog/classic metal mode (not my favourite metal genre but not in and of itself to be deplored). I don't think though that the metal arrangements add anything to the liturgy - they just make them a little mushy.

I had this conversation at a conference in Finland last year when I metal a Lutheran pastor who runs a hugekly popular 'Metal mass'. I appreciate that some worshippers feel it adds a whole new spiritual dimension, but as I explained to the pastor, I like there to be a dividing line between synagogue music and everyday music. I love sections of the Jewish liturgy, but I'd never want to listen to it on my iPhone outside of synagogue. Conversely, I've no need for metal in services.

Still, I try and remain open minded to the possibility that sometime, someone will come up with a metal liturgy that I actually like. Till then, I'll stick with metal artists who have a looser connection to spirituality, such as Orphaned Land.

Here's Eliyahu Dali doing 'Mipi El'. I love the tune when it's sung in shul, but this version just doesn't work for me: