Beeber, Steven Lee

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Beeber, Steven Lee

PERSONAL: Male.

CAREER: Writer, journalist, editor, and musician.

WRITINGS

The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s: A Secret History of Jewish Punk, Chicago Review Press (Chicago, IL), 2006.

(Editor) Awake: A Reader for the Sleepless, Soft Skull Press (Brooklyn, NY), 2007.

Contributor to periodicals, including Paris Review, Fiction Bridge, Spin, Mojo, Maxim, Details, Rain Taxi, Playboy.com, Conduit, and the New York Times.

SIDELIGHTS: Steven Lee Beeber is a writer and editor who also plays saxophone and worked with bands such as the Chowder Shouters, a gospel-punk bank in Atlanta, Georgia. He is a frequent contributor to a variety of magazines and is the editor of Awake: A Reader for the Sleepless, an anthology featuring fiction, comics, essays, poetry, found texts, and other material for insomniac readers.

In The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s: A Secret History of Jewish Punk, Beeber reconsiders the origins of punk rock, the rebellious musical genre of the mid-1970s characterized by Mohawk haircuts, safety-pin piercings, and defiant attitudes. Beeber challenges the conventional theories of punk’s origins in England and instead asserts that it developed from the efforts of Jewish performers, club owners, and producers in New York and America. “Beeber discloses that prime movers in creating, supporting, and popularizing punk were Jews,” noted Benjamin Segedin in Booklist. Based on more than 125 interviews with musicians and other sources, the book identifies a Jewish lineage for punk that begins with irreverent comic Lenny Bruce and continues through some of the genre’s most influential participants, including Lou Reed, Joey and Tommy Ramone, Chris Stein of Blondie, and the Beastie Boys. Beeber also finds it significant that one of the most influential and iconic music clubs of the time, the storied CBGB’s, was owned by a Jewish man, Hilly Kristal. Beeber assembles dozens of “interesting biographical sketches of the preeminent Jewish punks, rather astutely placing the punk rockers among the pantheon of Jewish entertainers,” observed a Publishers Weekly reviewer.

Beeber also addresses one of punk rock’s most controversial aspects: the embracing of Nazi imagery and symbolism. He finds this behavior to be in no way an endorsement of Nazism, but is instead a means of removing the power from these symbols through overexaggerated acceptance. Nazi symbols not only fed punk rock’s inherent need for rebellion, but also expressed “the intention of disrespecting Nazism by mocking the “failed seriousness” of these same symbols,” commented Sam Jemielity in Playboy.“So songs such as the Dictators’ ‘Master Race Rock’ or the Ramones’ ‘Blitzkrieg Bop’ are not disrespectful of Jews, but a joke—perhaps unsophisticated and in poor taste—mocking Nazism,” Jemielity stated.

“With equal parts spirit and scholarship, Beeber succeeds in placing this still-influential music within a broader historical and cultural context, and assures that punk’s ‘secret history’ is a secret no more,” concluded Reneée Graham in the Boston Globe. Library Journal contributor Matthew Moyer commented that “strong writing and even stronger subject matter keep one enthralled” with Beeber’s historical account.

BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES

PERIODICALS

Booklist, September 15, 2006, Benjamin Segedin, review of The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s: A Secret History of Jewish Punk, p. 14.

Boston Globe, December 4, 2006, Renée Graham, “Author Thoroughly Examines the Jewish Roots of Punk Rock,” review of The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s.

Library Journal, September 1, 2006, Matthew Moyer, review of The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s, p. 147.

Phoenix (Boston, MA), November 1, 2006, Ian Sands, “Who You Callin’ a Punk?,” review of The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s.

Playboy, October 26, 2006, Same Jemielity, review of The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s.

Publishers Weekly, July 31, 2006, review of The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s, p. 63.

ONLINE

Forward.com, http://www.forward.com/ (September 22, 2006), Alexander Gelfand, “Blitzkrieg Flop,” review of The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s.

FrontStreetReviews.com, http://www.frontstreetreviews.com/ (January 22, 2007), Susan Helene Gottfried, review of The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB’s.

Steven Lee Beeber Home Page, http://www.jewpunk.com (January 22, 2007).*