Monday, April 13, 2009

DJ Eric Rosen on Dark, Sexy, and Jewish House Music @ Jewcy.com

After reading my interview on PresenTense Magazine, Jennie Rivlin of ModernTribe decided to dig a little deeper into things, effectively remixing my original interview.

I'm sure you've heard remixes of plenty of your favorite songs time and time again, so here's the DJ Eric Rosen interview remix :)

Enjoy and be sure to click the 'LoveMusic' link in the article for some soundtrack music for your listening (and reading) pleasure.

Oh, also....watch out for my upcoming mix 'SoulSpeak....it should be up in the next week or so @ http://www.waxdj.com/djs/17.

Big ups to the superbuddy for the editing support & inspiration.

As always, feel free to share and listen with love :)


You can read the interview here:

http://www.jewcy.com/post/dj_eric_rosen_dark_sexy_and_jewish_house_music


Mucho mucho peace and blessings,

Eric Rosen
USC Marshall School of Business
MBA '09

Director of Brand Marketing | Jewlicious Festival | Threaded Heritage Clothing

http://www.JewliciousFestival.com
http://www.getthreaded.com
http://www.waxdj.com/djs/17
http://twitter.com/djericrosen

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Is there a Nationwide Muslim Student boycott of Israel?

Written by Rabbi Yonah

In addition to an attempted boycott, Jewish students were taunted, harassed and verbally assaulted during protests at CSU Long Beach sponsored by Answer-LA and the local Muslim Student Association.

Protesters from Answer-LA and CSU Long Beach's Muslim Student Association staged a series of protests in February. Jewish and israel students were taunted, harrassed and verbally assaulted.


Is there a nationwide boycott effort underway on college campuses? Our experience at CSU Long Beach would seem to say, “yes.” And it may be illegal.

On March 18th, Zo Farooqui, an assimilated Muslim student senator (whose Facebook page features the quote “Kiss French. Wear Italian. Drive German. Drink Russian.”) submitted a sophisticated, albeit totally false set of accusations against Israel, and nearly got the Student Senate to pass the resolution.

Title: Resolution in Support of the Call for the Immediate End to the Humanitarian Crisis in Gaza and a Boycott of Goods and Services that Maintain Business Relations with Israel

Sponsored by: Senator Zo Farooqui

Date Submitted: March 18, 2009

WHERAS from December 27, 2008 to January 22, 2009 attacks launched by the Israeli government on Gaza have resulted in over 1,300 deaths and 5,300 injuries, with more than 60 percent of the victims consisting of women and children;1

WHEREAS schools, mosques, hospitals, ambulances, civilian infrastructure, and UN compounds have been targeted; (read the whole resolution below)

Thanks to some quick thinking Senators, they did not let their campus be a tool in the hands of the MSA - and the effort failed on the second reading.

Jewish students alerted to the issue rallied at the meeting for Israel. Community members sent dozens of letters within hours to the Senators when the word went out about the boycott effort.

Farooqui attempted to change the resolution to only target future contracts with Motorola and Caterpillar - when faced with the charge by Student Senate Treasurer, Brian Troutner, that breaking the existing contracts would cost tens of thousands of dollars.

Senator Everett Bryan of the College of Engineering spoke up and said that asking the school to boycott companies won’t have an impact on the situation in Israel, and instead there are financial side effects and social side effects. The Associated Students can’t take a side on a conflict between two groups because it is a student organization which represents both groups. The negative effect of the boycott will be felt on students, not companies. He was also bothered that there was no end-date, doesn’t think resolution is humanitarian based, instead it’s politically charged, and recommended rejection. He suggested that the MSA and Hillel to write a resolution together that isn’t a boycott and addresses loss of civillian life. (notes courtesy of Sheryl Cohen)

Congress passed a law in 1977 creating the Office of Antiboycott Compliance within the Department of Commerce, in response to the Arab boycott of Israel. It specifically makes illegal agreements to refuse or actual refusal to do business with or in Israel or with blacklisted companies.

If there is a nationwide effort among Muslim Student groups, part of the larger boycott movement against Israel, they might be breaking the law. If they are going across state lines with communications that in effect commit a crime, they can be guilty of some other nasty stuff.

And more so, if they conspire together to deprive Israel and Israelis of certain rights in the US, be they business dealings or any other, they may be guilty of racketeering and conspiracy charges too

Title: Resolution in Support of the Call for the Immediate End to the Humanitarian Crisis in Gaza and a Boycott of Goods and Services that Maintain Business Relations with Israel

Sponsored by: Senator Zo Farooqui

Date Submitted: March 18, 2009

WHERAS from December 27, 2008 to January 22, 2009 attacks launched by the Israeli government on Gaza have resulted in over 1,300 deaths and 5,300 injuries, with more than 60 percent of the victims consisting of women and children;1

WHEREAS schools, mosques, hospitals, ambulances, civilian infrastructure, and UN compounds have been targeted;

WHEREAS this recent act of blatant violence contributes to the 18-month blockade enforced by the Israeli government on the Gaza strip through strict patrol of its borders. The aforementioned act has resulted in the devastation of Gaza’s infrastructure up to and including the collapse of its economy, causing 80 percent of the population to rely on international aid for the basic means of survival;2

WHEREAS Israeli occupation forces have demolished electricity, gas, and water resources of the region, leaving half of the Gaza population consisting of children in an open-air prison with no option of becoming refugees;3

WHEREAS Israel’s continuous denial of medical supplies in the region constitutes a violation of their signatory obligation to the First Geneva Convention, and causes an inability to treat the wounded, resulting in otherwise preventable deaths;4

WHEREAS Human Rights Watch has found that the Israeli government has used the controversial chemical weapon white phosphorus which “sticks to human skin and will burn right through to the bone” in areas of high civilian density;5

WHEREAS the Fourth Geneva convention renders Israel’s actions a war crime based on its intent and grotesque disproportionate use of military action;6

WHEREAS arbitrary damage of property, denial of rest areas (shelters), and discrimination based on political ideology and other actions put the Israeli Government in direct violation of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Articles 5, 12, 13, 15, 17, 21 and 24; be it

RESOLVED that the Associated Students of California State University, Long Beach stand in solidarity to condemn all violence against civilians in the region and demand the removal of the blockade on Gaza, including the opening of its borders, while condemning Israel’s disproportionate aggression toward the Palestinian people; be it further

RESOLVED that ASI participates in a boycott of companies that have any economic ties to the Israeli state, be it finally

RESOLVED that ASI urges California State University, Long Beach, its foundation and its auxiliary to end all business action, including investments, and procurement with companies that maintain business with the state of Israel.


originally posted @ http://www.jewlicious.com/2009/04/is-there-a-nationwide-muslim-student-boycott-of-israel/

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

DJ Eric Rosen Interview @ PresentTense Magazine

House music—a mix of electronic dance, disco, funk, soul, jazz, psychedelic rock—may not be the first thing we think to turn to when searching for truth. But DJ Eric Rosen has taken house music, his turntable, and Torah along for his eleven-year journey of self-discovery.

Born to a musical family, Eric was raised on Israeli folk music, beating drums with his brother and playing guitar with his dad. As Eric became more passionate about guitar, he gravitated towards metal. Soon he adopted the long-haired rocker look and started hanging out backstage at Pantera concerts, sometimes even moshing up a crowd. But at 15, finding himself with a house mix made by a friend, he discovered the musical genre that would serve as his inspiration. It was a style that he, at first, hated. But it changed his life.

Eric realized that metal was “angry music,” something he didn’t want to be associated with anymore. House was its antithesis. He traded in the moshing and got himself a job at a record store where he experimented with turntables. It was around this time that, thanks to a Birthright trip, he discovered Israel.

With the inspiration he received from Israel, his true music emerged. “Torah showed me what we are here to do, and what the seriously heavy implications of music really are. The Jewish people have a mission to unify the world, and when this became something that I learned about, the music became a reflection of this.”

Today, and eleven years of mixes later, Eric is producing a soundtrack that represents his Jewish development, from metalhead, to Buddhist, to wandering Jew. He DJs all over the LA area, in some of the city’s most popular venues. And he constantly finds himself running into Jews on the dance floor.

“We are drawn to the tribal rhythms of today the same way we have always been,” he says. “It is a translation of the Jewish journey into music. We are constantly seeking unity through music in a way that can best be felt on a sweaty dance floor where background, occupation, religious affiliation matters not, because the music is what unifies us.”

That’s why Eric is so glad that the Jewlicious Festival—a Jewish music festival held annually in Long Beach, California— found him. At Jewlicious, he now not only DJs, but is also the Festival’s director of marketing and branding, having helped make it the sold-out success that it is today.

Eric’s next project is working on a fusion of classic niggunim (songs without lyrics) and traditional Jewish melodies mixed with house and hip-hop music.

“There are definite parallels between niggunim and some house tracks. The melodies of instruments, the clapping of rhythm and beats allows us to interpret music in our own way, the way niggunim opens up the soul to hear music on a level that lyrics can never reach.”

With all his sounds, Eric finds his inspiration for a new mix by learning a piece of Torah or reading a spiritual text and bringing that into the music.

“Always bring God into the picture,” Eric says. “The reality is Him anyway, even the music and the turntables, and the records and the guitars. Even your hands, feet, creativity, and the air you breathe to sustain life during the creative process.”

And when the material is down and the mix is burned, the secret then is to create a chavruta—a one-on-one experience with the crowd.

“You have to read the crowd and play tracks that fit the vibe of the moment,” Eric says, “and that will take everyone to the next level, wherever and whatever that might be. The Jewish journey is about finding the middle ground for oneself. In finding one’s one truth amongst a multitude of truths where institutional agendas bend and pull at all of us to see ‘their way.’”

To hear DJ Eric’s tracks, visit his site http://waxdj.com/djs/17/ and also http://www.jewliciousfestival.com

Monica Rozenfeld is a freelance writer living in NYC. You can catch more of her interviews with Jewish musicians, activists and entrepreneurs on her blog The Jew Spot at www.TheJewSpot.org.

Original Article appeared @

http://www.presentense.org/magazine/issue-6/arts/portrait-artist-gods-his-dj

Monday, March 30, 2009

DJ Eric Rosen presents 'Synergy Lives'

This dancefloor-friendly mix covers a wide terrain of sonic landscapes, drawing rich influence from Balearic disco, jazz remixes, San Francisco house staples, percussion-heavy African breakbeats, re-edited disco/rare groove, and classic warehouse tracks from the late 80's and early 90's.


I made this on a whim for a road-trip up to San Francisco over New Year's Eve, and it came out so well I decided to put it out officially.

Click here to download/stream 'Synergy Lives' now:

http://www.waxdj.com/djs/17

Also, 'Back' and 'LoveMusic' are midtempo/raregroove/
leftfieldhouse and the rest of the mixes on the page are a wide variety of house music.


Enjoy and feel free to share with friends :)


Eric Rosen
USC Marshall School of Business
MBA '09

Director of Marketing
Jewlicious Festival 5.0
Feb.27-Mar.1, 2009 LA/Long Beach

"An event unlike any other weekend in Jewish history"

http://www.JewliciousFestival.com