The Jerusalem Post

He produced the Stones, Dylan and John Mayer, now Don Was is adding Jewish music to his resume

- • By GABE FRIEDMAN

Three years ago, Don Was walked into a Jewish service in Los Angeles without high expectatio­ns. Was, born Don Fagenson in Detroit, is a producer who has worked with musicians like John Mayer, Bob Dylan and Bonnie Raitt. Since 2012, he has also been the president of Blue Note Records, the historic and acclaimed jazz record label.

Since his bar mitzvah in 1965, he has rarely stepped into a synagogue.

But his aging father, who was getting remarried, was set to be honored by his beloved egalitaria­n congregati­on and wanted his son to be there. He also wanted him to see the congregati­on’s live band, which played during its monthly service.

The congregati­on, named Nashuva (lit. we will return in Hebrew), is the creation of Naomi Levy, a Conservati­ve rabbi who was among the first women ordained by the Jewish Theologica­l Seminary in the mid-1980s. The 10-person band, which has mostly stayed the same over the congregati­on’s 14-year lifespan, is a diverse amalgam of cultures and musical traditions, boasting Filipino, Ethiopian and other Jewish and non-Jewish members from the local community. Levy doesn’t play an instrument, but sings and helps write the melodies.

Was approached Levy afterward, admiring the tunes and suggesting that she record it later. They became friends and, six months later, Levy and the band found themselves in the famous Apogee Studios in Santa Monica, California.

“I was pretty knocked out by the fact that she took these profound prayers and transferre­d them in a way that everybody in the room could relate to, and it was a very uplifting evening,” Was told JTA.

The result of the Apogee sessions was Heaven on Earth: Songs of the Soul, an album released earlier this month that set 13 Jewish prayers to a mix of African-inspired world music beats and calming folk melodies. Was and Rolling Stones recording engineer, Krish Sharma assisted in the recording, which was mixed by Grammy Award winner Ed Cherney.

In the studio, each song took at most two takes, a testament to how practiced the musicians were. Was invited congregant­s to add their voices to the mix, leaving the studio crowded at times.

Was, speaking just after completing a lengthy US tour as part of a band backing Grateful Dead guitarist Bob Weir, compared the effects of the music played by Levy’s band with what Weir evokes. He described the feelings that Weir would produce when playing the Dead’s classic song “Ripple” during encores – Was could see members of the audience crying and hugging.

“I thought Naomi was doing the same things with these prayers that had been around forever,” Was said. “She made them resonant in a really relevant way, which is not a small feat.”

THE NASHUVA BAND’S music is full of big, catchy melodies, which Levy said is part of the congregati­on’s larger goal of attracting unaffiliat­ed Jews who don’t realize they are yearning for spiritual fulfillmen­t. When Levy worked previously as a rabbi at a Conservati­ve synagogue in Venice Beach, she’d see many stragglers poke their heads in to Saturday morning services but leave after a few minutes.

“I found myself more and more drawn to the Jewish outsider, I wanted to learn what they were about and how to reach them,” she said. “They haven’t found God or a soulful experience in synagogue. They find it in yoga class or at their Zen center, but they haven’t found it in Judaism.”

Now Nashuva, which relies on volunteer help and grassroots donations, draws about 400 people at monthly services and streams High Holiday programs to 70,000 people around the globe.

Was’s father, Bill Fagenson, who passed away earlier this year, was among Nashuva’s biggest fans. Was said his father became less interested in Judaism when he was growing up, but Nashuva’s message spoke to him, and had a religious awakening later in life.

After, his bar mitzvah Was wasn’t exposed to much of Jewish life. But he received a great musical education growing up near Detroit in the ’60s, which attracted all kinds of musical legacies thanks to its auto factories. Workers from all background­s migrated to work in factories and brought their favorite genres with them – from blues to jazz to country western.

In 1979, Was and his friend David Weiss – a fellow secular Jew – formed Was (Not Was), a quirky band that melded pop, funk and rock and experience­d some success by the late ’80s. He built a producing resume at the same time, and by 1994 won the Grammy for producer of the year. (He has won three other Grammys and produced albums by artists including the Rolling Stones, Neil Diamond and former One Direction pop star, Niall Horan.)

Was hasn’t exactly returned to religion the same way his father did, but attends a Nashuva service when he has time in his busy schedule and happens to be in LA

“She created a great vibe,” he said of Levy. “And it’s what you try to do with all music, really, is to improve the quality of the listener’s life, help them understand something about life.” (JTA)

 ?? (Ron Baker) ?? DON WAS
(Ron Baker) DON WAS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel