Shemspeed

Shemspeed

The official Shemspeed logo.
Founded 2007
Founder Erez Safar
Distributor(s) Modular Moods
Genre Various
Country of origin United States
Location Brooklyn, NY
Official website shemspeed.com

Shemspeed is an American independent recording label and promotional agency, working primarily in the genres of hip hop, dancehall, pop and world music. Shemspeed was started in 2007 by Erez Safar.

Merchandise

Shemspeed's website, Shemspeed.com, focuses on Jewish music and music videos, events listings, features and reviews, and a music and apparel store.[1][2] To promote the website’s launch, Safar booked four concerts in four nights at venues in Jerusalem, London, New York and Los Angeles with over 40 live acts in total.[2]

In early 2010, Shemspeed began selling a blue and white "Israeli keffiyeh" with Stars of David and the Hebrew slogan "Am Yisrael Chai" ("The people of Israel live"). Manufactured by Baruch Chertok’s company, Dveykus, the scarves caused some minor controversy by putting a Jewish spin on the Middle Eastern garb most prominently associated with the former Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.[3] Safar defended the sale of the keffiyehs, noting that Jews indigenous to the Middle East have worn some variation of the keffiyeh for thousands of years.[4]

Events

Sephardic Music Festival

Shemspeed organizes an annual Sephardic Music Festival, which is held at various venues in New York City around Hanukkah.[5][6]

Shemspeed released the 2010 compilation album Sephardic Music Festival, Vol. 1, featuring Middle Eastern-influenced tracks from several Jewish artists, including Matisyahu, Pharaoh's Daughter, DeScribe, Moshav and Sarah Aroeste. A second volume was released in 2012.[7]

Hip Hop Sulha

Shemspeed also organizes Hip Hop Sulha, a concert series promoting interfaith tolerance. The concerts have featured Jewish acts such as the Americans Yuri Lane and Y-Love and the Israeli Sagol 59 alongside Arabic artists like Saz and the N.O.M.A.D.S..[8]

Artists

Shemspeed discography

Albums

Selected singles

References

  1. "Forward 50, 2007," The Forward. Retrieved November 17, 2011.
  2. 1 2 Ben Jacobson, “Young and Jewish on the Web”, Jerusalem Post Billboard, October 19–25, 2007.
  3. Michele Chabin, "Reclaiming The Keffiyah?" The New York Jewish Week, January 28, 2010.
  4. Robert Mackey, "An 'Israeli Remix' of a Palestinian Scarf," New York Times, February 8, 2010.
  5. Mordechai Shinefield, "Monday Music: Sephardic Music Takes On the Club Scene," The Forward, January 17, 2011.
  6. "Heard & Scene: Festival Shines Spotlight on Sephardic Culture," The Wall Street Journal, December 6, 2010.
  7. Tad Hendrickson, "Bringing Out Sephardic Music's New Voices," Wall Street Journal, December 7, 2012.
  8. Rachel Breitman, "Rapping in the name of interfaith tolerance," USA Today, October 2, 2006.
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