Shlock Rock

Shlock Rock is an American-Israeli Jewish rock band, put together in December 1985, and officially founded in 1986, and led by, singer Lenny Solomon,[1] which parodies popular secular songs, substituting new, religious-themed lyrics for the music. To date they have released 36 albums. Shlock Rock continues to record albums and perform live as of 2015, and to date has sold more than 200,000 CD’s, tapes and DVDs in the contemporary Jewish rock arena. Their music is a mix of pop-rock song parodies and original rock songs in English and Hebrew. The purpose of the band is to spread Jewish pride, identity and awareness throughout the Jewish community, for Jewish continuity. Solomon and Shlock Rock tour around the world, playing at concerts, schools, and Jewish events. They are the only Jewish Music band to play a concert in all 50 States.

Shlock Rock
Background information
Origin
GenresJewish rock
Rock
Pop
Years active1985–present
Associated actsEtan G Marc Skier
Websitewww.shlockrock.com
MembersLenny Solomon
Assorted "Shlockers"

History

According to Solomon, in December 1985, Lenny and the band "rented the 39th Street Music studio in New York for two weeks from midnight to 8:00am as it was the only time slot they could afford."[2] Their first album was under the name "Schlock Rock" and titled "Learning is Good".[3] It was released in January 1986.[3]

The original Shlock Rock band consisted of Lenny Solomon (keyboards, vocals), Yonah Lloyd (guitar), Gary Wallin (drums), Mark Skier (bass), Mark Infield (saxophone, keyboards, percussion), and Danny Block (saxophone, violin).[1] It has since gone on to include the "Jewish Rapper" Etan G, as well as Roy Weinberger on drums, Mo Shapiro on guitar and Rami Strosberg on saxophone. On tour, the band uses local musicians, except for Solomon and Etan G.[3]

In March 2009, Shlock Rock released their 31st album “No Limits” online. It was offered in a pay-what-you-want format at a minimum download price of $1 for the twelve-song album. Customers who paid the retail price ($15), or more, also received the CD upon its release on December 2009. The album was recorded in Haworth, New Jersey. "I wrote twelve songs in four days from my house in Israel," Solomon stated, "I love these songs and want everyone to have them." The offer ran until March 28 (Passover of that year).[4] The band released its official video for "Another Door Opens" from the album in July.[5]

In 2011, the band released Shabbat in Liverpool, "adapting Shabbat services to the tunes of Lennon and McCartney."[6]

Musical style and hit songs

Shlock Rock parodies popular secular songs, substituting new, Jewish religious-themed lyrics for the originals, and is "best known for songs that educate and entertain through parody."[7][8]

Hit songs include "We've Got a Strong Desire" (sung to the tune of Billy Joel's "We Didn't Start the Fire"),[7][9] "Abarbanel" (sung to the tune of The Beach Boys' "Barbara Ann"), "Achashverosh" (sung to the tune of Falco's "Rock Me Amadeus"" (the Salieri Club Mix), and "My Bekeshe Needs Cleaning" (sung to the tune of The Mamas & the Papas' "California Dreamin'").

Other songs by Shlock Rock include:

(The following songs are from the Showtune-based album "Almost on Broadway")

Discography

Shlock Rock releases from 1986-2015 include 36 albums, 3 music video compilations and 1 songbook.

  • Learning is Good (1986)
  • Purim Torah (1987)
  • Jewish Pride (1987)
  • Emunah (1988)
  • To Unite All Jews (1988)
  • Songs of the Morning (1989)
  • Lenny and the Shlockers (1990)
  • Shlock Rock Videos, Volume 1 (1990)
  • Sgt. Shlockers Magical History Tour (1991)
  • Shlock Rock Videos Volume 2 (1992)
  • The Kosher Police (1992)
  • We're Coming Back (1992)
  • Bring Back That Shabbos Feeling (1993)
  • Manual For The Moral Minded (1994)
  • Woodshlock (1995)
  • Shlock Rock For Kids Volume 1 (1995)
  • Shlock Rock Songbook (1996)
  • Stories From the Holy Land (1997)
  • Shlock Rock Greatest Hits Volume 1 - The Early Years 1986-1990
  • Mikdash (1997)
  • Shlock Rock For Kids Sing Together (1998)
  • Menchville The Musical (1998)
  • Shlock Rock Meets The Prophets (1999)
  • Shlock Rock JMTV - Videos Volume 3 (2000)
  • God Sent Us Email (2001)
  • Rock Moshiach/Bitah Achishenah (2002)
  • Almost on Broadway (2003)
  • Tnu Lanu Siman/Give Us A Sign (2004)
  • Shlock Rock For Kids Volume 3 We're In The Band (2005)
  • J-Rap City - Shlock Rock Rap Compilation - Feat. Etan G November (2005)
  • ReJewVenated (2006)
  • Shlock Rock Music Videos (on DVD)
  • Shlock Rock GH2 - Greatest Hits Volume 2 – 1991-1996
  • Osher V'Osher (2008)
  • Shlock Rock For Kids Party Time (2008)
  • No Limits (2009)
  • A Shabbat in Liverpool (2010)
  • Kosher Cake (January 2012)
  • Still Not Quite on Broadway (2012)
  • Derech Haor (2012)
  • Shlockapella (March 2015)
gollark: There are many languages you can use for web*server*y stuff, but you can only really use HTML/CSS/JS for frontends.
gollark: With Express.js the server thing would look *very roughly* like this:```javascriptconst express = require("express")const multer = require("multer")const app = express()const upload = multer({ storage: multer.memoryStorage(), limits: { fileSize: 2**22 // 4MiB maximum filesize }})app.get("/image", (req, res) => { res.send(loadImageFromSomewhere())})// send upload form HTML - you would need to write this tooapp.get("/upload", (req, res) => res.sendFile("upload.html"))app.post("/upload", upload.single("file"), (req, res) => { saveImageSomewhere(req.file.buffer)})app.listen(8700, () => console.log("listening")) // listen on port 8700```
gollark: I mean, you could use PHP too. I don't like it. But you could.
gollark: What I might do, though there are probably many ways to: make a program in Node.js or whatever (personal preference) which responds with whatever image is set to any requests for that, and which allows you to upload an image, converts it to the right format, then saves it to be sent when the ESP requests it.
gollark: And you want to be able to upload pictures to some sort of web thing to send to the ESP?

See also

References

  1. "About us". ShlockRock.com.
  2. "About Us (1999)". Shlock Rock. Archived from the original on 1999-10-08.
  3. Goldberg, Jennifer (February 11, 2004). "That old time shlock 'n' roll". Jewish News of Greater Phoenix. 56 (21). Archived from the original on March 18, 2012.
  4. News. shlockrock.com.
  5. "Shlock Rock No Limits – Another Door Opens – Official Video". JewishInsights.com. July 11, 2011.
  6. Harkov, Lahav (January 13, 2011). "The Weekly Schmooze: Sing out, Streisand!". Jerusalem Post.
  7. Singer, David (2001). American Jewish Year Book: 2001. American Jewish Committee. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-87495-116-5. 'I've Got a Strong Desire'...recounts all of Jewish history in 42 lines...
  8. Ettinger, Steven (2003). Torah 24/7: a timely guide for the modern spirit. Devora Publishing. ISBN 978-1-930143-73-9. ...describing 4000 years of Jewish history
  9. Fine, Arlene (November 29, 2002). "Shlock Rock rolls into Cleveland". Cleveland Jewish News. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012. Anyone familiar with Billy Joel's popular song 'We Didn't Start the Fire' will appreciate Shlock Rock's parody of the tune, 'We've Got A Strong Desire'

Bibliography

  • Shlock Rock (1997). The Shlock Rock Songbook. Tara Publications. ISBN 978-0-933676-58-9.
  • Retting, Nechama; Greenberg, Tobey (December 1, 2009). Morah, Morah Teach Me Torah. Torah Aura Productions. ISBN 978-1-934527-26-9. - Contributed lyrics for many Torah-related songs
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