Schmekel was an all-transgender, Jewish folk punk band from Brooklyn, New York, known for their satirical lyrical material.[1] Schmekel made their audiences more comfortable with transgender topics through jokes, but also often included lyrical references to obscure queer, Jewish, and punk content that only cultural insiders would recognize.[2] Their most popular song was "FTM at the DMV" (released in 2013), which has over 400,000 plays on Spotify as of 2024.[3]
Eddy Portnoy of The Forward cited Schmekel as an example of the cultural movement "QueerYiddishkeit."[22] Schmekel's lyrics frequently referred to Jewish holidays, and their first album started with Kahn sounding the Yom Kippur "tekiah" and bassist Nogga Schwartz blowing a shofar[23] before launching into a punk song. The Jewish Music Resource Centre at Hebrew University of Jerusalem noted that Schmekel's music used "direct musical quotes from traditional Jewish melodies such as Chad Gadya, Ma'oz Tzur, and Al Chet".[24] Professor of Musicology Edwin Seroussi compared Schmekel's tongue-in-cheek allusions to prayers to similar inside jokes in Yiddish theatre and vaudeville at the turn of the 20th century.[24]
According to an interview with Tablet Magazine, the different members of Schmekel participated in different amounts of religious observance but had all experienced difficulty in synagogue because of being transgender, which they addressed in their music.[25] However, in an interview with Jewcy, they expressed feeling accepted at Congregation Beit Simchat Torah and Nehirim.[12]
After Schmekel broke up, singer and guitarist Lucian Kahn became a writer and game designer of tabletop role-playing games with LGBT, Jewish, and subcultural themes, making Visigoths vs. Mall Goths[30] and If I Were a Lich, Man, a set of comedic Jewish games about creative resistance against authoritarianism.[31] Keyboardist Itai Gal (Ricky Riot) formed a new band called Itai and the Ophanim and released Arise (2019), an album of traditional and original religious music, including "prayers for justice and unity among humans and Earth."[32] Bassist Nogga Schwartz began working in healthcare.[33] Drummer Simcha Halpert-Hanson became a rabbi.[34][35]