British band was first to use Yiddish in a top 40 hit.
By The Forward and Seth Rogovoy in Haaretz
The
Rolling Stones taking the stage at HaYarkon Park in Tel Aviv on June 4,
represented more than just the world’s greatest and longest-running
rock band’s first concert in Israel. It also marked one small victory in
the war against a rock ’n’ roll boycott of Israel being waged by some
English rockers, mostly at the instigation of Roger Waters of Pink Floyd
who, despite some very public efforts, couldn’t sway Mick Jagger and
Keith Richards against finally making their Holy Land debut.The Rolling Stones, in fact, have had a long and fruitful collaboration with Jewish artists, friends and associates, and some Jewish themes have even made their way into their music and lyrics.
Like many early British rock bands, The Rolling Stones started out playing American blues. Most of the members of the Stones served their apprenticeship in Blues Incorporated, a band led by blues guitarist Alexis Korner, who was born in Paris to an Austrian Jewish father and a Turkish-Greek mother. Stones founding guitarist Brian Jones, drummer Charlie Watts, and keyboardist Ian Stewart all played with Blues Incorporated, and vocalist Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards jammed with the group on a number of occasions, before the five joined forces and formed The Rolling Stones.
Building on the lessons he learned as a protege of Brian Epstein — the Jewish owner of a record store in Liverpool, who turned that city’s most popular bar band into the international sensation known as The Beatles — Andrew Loog Oldham, also Jewish, soon took over management of The Rolling Stones, reshaped their image, and steered them toward a broader musical palette.
For one, he turned them into the anti-Beatles, giving them a more “dangerous” and rebellious image — longer and unkempt hair, and an overt sense of sexuality and violence. Oldham enlisted the services of photographer Gered Mankowitz — the son of English Jewish screenwriter Wolf Mankowitz — who was responsible for the band’s early album covers and publicity shots. Mankowitz was as responsible as Oldham was for creating the Stones’s bad-boy image, and he was the official tour photographer on the band’s first United States tour in 1965.
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It
was a bleak January morning in Portland, Maine. Clouds heavy with foul
weather and wet snow enshrouded the city’s stern Victorian houses and
dormant factories. Casco Bay, white-capped and gray and dotted with
mournful tankers, blew an icy gale. In the lobby of the Holiday Inn,
where I was staying, wildly cheerful out-of-towners, members of a
booster club for a visiting minor-league hockey team, milled about,
looking beefy and hungover. Stacks of complimentary USA Today gathered
dust at strategic locations. A Mainer—I swear he was wearing a flannel
shirt and one of those plaid hunting caps with the earflaps—was drunk at
8 a.m. and arguing with a receptionist that he’d accused of stealing
his medications.
Talia
Lakritz, 20, a Modern Orthodox Jewish sophomore at Barnard College, and
her two girlfriends got off a very crowded No. 3 train at Kingston
Avenue in a fevered hurry of glee, as they headed to an open-mic night
for women at the gallery at The Creative Soul, an organization in the
Crown Heights section of Brooklyn.
So
it wasn’t until he began playing violin in a New York City youth
orchestra that Warshaw was first introduced to the work of the
notoriously anti-Semitic 19th-century German opera composer. And rather
embarrassingly, he found himself smitten.