Steve Lieberman

Steve Lieberman
Lieberman playing on 'My Last Rock Show' December 11, 2011, before first round of chemotherapy
Lieberman playing on 'My Last Rock Show' December 11, 2011, before first round of chemotherapy
Background information
Birth nameSteven Paul Lieberman
Also known asThe Gangsta Rabbi
The King Of Jewish Punk,[1]
Steven Lieberman-Marcus Steve Lieberman the Gangsta Rabbi
Born (1958-06-21) June 21, 1958 (age 66)
Brooklyn, New York
OriginFreeport, New York
GenresPunk rock, Art rock, Jewish rock, Noise Rock, garage punk, Industrial rock, obscuro, metal, Marching band, Jewish music, Jazz, PitBash, Jewish Punk, "Thrash Opera", "Militia Punk" '
Instrument(s)Bass guitar, flutes, vocals, trombone, bass trombone, alto trombone,valve trombone, soprano saxophone, Mangal Vadya, recorders soprano trombone melodica, guitar, tenor guitar, bombard, shehnai, clarinet, trumpet, French Horn, euphonium, shofar,didgeridoo, serpent. beatmachines, bass clarinet, concert mellophone
Years active1971–2012, 2014–present
LabelsJDub
Websitewww.gangstarabbi.com

Steven Paul Lieberman (born June 21, 1958), also known as the Gangsta Rabbi and The King of Jewish Punk,[2][3] (Hebrew name ליב פרץ בין אליאזר ה־בדלן ה־נזדי or Lev Ava'ran bar-Eli'ezar ha-Bad'lan ha-Naz'ari) is a Jewish-American punk rock /metal singer, songwriter, multi-instrumental musician, composer, arranger, producer and former village comptroller residing in Freeport, New York. He is a Hebrew Nazarite, the founder of The Bad'lanim, a minority sect of Judaism and a vegetarian since 1995. He held the Guinness World Record for Longest Officially Released Song for The Noise Militia (#38/76) at 35 hours, 41 minutes and 9 seconds, from December 3, 2020, until October 2, 2021.[4][5] On June 1, 2022, Lieberman's sequel to "The Noise Militia" entitled The Post-Militia Pogo-Battalion(#39/77) was completed with a duration of 76 hours, 30 minutes and 27 seconds and was submitted to Guinness unsuccessfully to reclaim the record. During the sessions of The Noise Militia, Lieberman experimented with the fusion of genres where he developed "Militia Punk" a mixture of noise-punk, thrash- metal and military music.[6]

Lieberman is often considered an outsider musician,[7][8] This has been partially attributed to his lifelong struggle with bipolar disorder,[9] which first struck him in 1970 at the age of 11, as well as his decade-long fight with progressive leukemia in his later years, which ultimately was deemed terminal and has become a recurring theme in his lyrics. By the end of 2017, Lieberman refused all further cancer treatment. From this time, he was in and out of home hospice care.

In 2009, Lieberman signed a multi-album deal with Jewish indie label JDub Records,[10] taking the place of Matisyahu on their artist roster. As of the spring of 2011, Lieberman, a town comptroller by trade, was "the world’s only Orthodox Jewish heavy metal musician with a record deal", according to Newsday.[11]

Steve Lieberman at his grave

Over his career, he has commercially released 40 CDs and 38 cassette albums in the underground, using the Bop Bop Bigger Bab-èL moniker and reissued in 2016 for the 25th anniversary of his first cassette album, "Bang the Bass Bopmania" as "Bop Bop Bigger Bab-èL featuring Steve Lieberman".[12]

On all his releases, Lieberman sings and plays all instruments. On the early primitive-sounding cassette releases during the 1990s he played chords and leads on a distorted bass accompanied by a Yamaha DD-6 drum machine. By 2002 as he started releasing commercial cd's, he added and featured flutes as well as various brass instruments and a variety of Eastern instruments. In his later years, he has added 6-string guitars and arranged and played a full brass and woodwind choir in an effort to fuse punk rock with marching band music and jazz, and eventually opera and classical. He shared the stage with Weezer, Andrew WK, Glassjaw, Ryan Dunn and the Misfits before retiring from performing in December 2011 to battle accelerated phase myeloproliferative leukemia.[13] He briefly returned to the stage in the spring of 2016 to perform Gangsta Rabbi's Quadrophenia performed in its entirety on a three-stop farewell tour as a solo act, accompanying himself on his trademark distorted bass, a 3-string Fender Stratocaster and alto trombone. His 2010 song "No Festival of Lights (On This Hanukkah)" has received honorable mention placement in the Song of the Year Award[14]
Although Lieberman's music seemingly had little commercial success, unaudited download and stream sales of his first 40 records approached 20,000,000 in 21 years as of July 2023. In September 2018, Lieberman's single, "The Diarrhea Song" had briefly appeared on the Apple iTunes Top 100 UK Rock chart, peaking at No. 22 and "3 Little Puppies" peaked at No. 19 on the Apple iTunes Top 100 Other Territories Chart two years later .He received airplay on Rich Russo's free-form Anything Anything with Rich Russo radio show[15] on New York City WRXP 101.9 and WDHA-FM 105.5 commercial rock radio stations. Throughout the shows Lieberman's music was featured on, Russo described him as "Jethro Tull meets the Beastie Boys, a one-man Jethro Tull" as well as "an inspiration to all suffering from serious illness" Additionally, Lieberman enjoyed some success on college radio, where The Rabbi Is Dead peaked at No. 3 on KZSU Stanford University in 2012[16] and "Jewish Pirate" had a one-week appearance at No. 8 on WUSB (FM) Stony Brook University two years after release in 2008.

  1. ^ Croland, Michael. "The King of Jewish Punk: Steve "Gangsta Rabbi" Lieberman". Retrieved February 7, 2017.
  2. ^ Croland, Michael. "The King of Jewish Punk: Steve "Gangsta Rabbi" Lieberman". {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  3. ^ Profeta, Keith (December 11, 2016). "The Gangsta Rabbi Keeps it Rolling as the King of Jewish Punk". Retrieved February 21, 2017.
  4. ^ "Longest officially released song".
  5. ^ "Freeport's Gangsta Rabbi Breaks Guinness World Record". July 9, 2021.
  6. ^ "Exploding Punk, Metal and Marching Band fusion onto the musical soundscape of his new record: Steve Lieberman the Gangsta Rabbi dispels newer dimensions in his latest record". artistpr.com. July 9, 2021. Retrieved November 11, 2023.
  7. ^ McIntosh, Gregory. "All Music Guide-Steve Lieberman-Arbeiter At The gate Review-2004". AllMusic. Retrieved November 20, 2004.
  8. ^ described as "walking the line between insanity and genius [sic]".Johnson, Miles (August 2006), "Flute Loop: The Gangsta Rabbi", Dazed and Confused
  9. ^ Haskell, Wildy (July 16, 2008). "Review of Steve Lieberman "Psych Ward" 7/16/2008". Retrieved July 16, 2008.
  10. ^ White, Adam (December 29, 2009). "Steve Lieberman the Gangsta Rabbi Signs With JDub Records PunkNews.org". Retrieved December 29, 2009.
  11. ^ Epstein, Reid. "His Music Is the Message-Village Comptroller Rocks out as the Gangsta Rabbi". Retrieved May 3, 2011.
  12. ^ "All-Music Guide-Steve Lieberman The Gangsta Rabbi Discography". AllMusic. August 2011. Retrieved August 14, 2011.
  13. ^ "The Gangsta Rabbi". JDub Records. Archived from the original on 27 April 2010. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  14. ^ "'Steve Lieberman Receives Songwriting Award". Retrieved April 29, 2011.
  15. ^ Russo, Rich (December 5, 2010). "WRXP 101.9 Anything Anything Playlist for 12/5/2010". Retrieved December 7, 2010.
  16. ^ "KZSU Airplay Chart for the week ending 2 June 2012". Retrieved April 9, 2015.