Shliach and iZZy D JaY Unite on New Reggae Single "All For You"
California shliach Rabbi Yoey Muchnik and producer iZZy D JaY dropped a reggae-Jewish fusion single built around the Hebrew-English refrain "Everything I do, it's for You, Hakodesh Baruch Hu."

Rabbi Yoey Muchnik, the California shliach who records professionally as Shliach, has joined forces with producer iZZy D JaY on "All For You," a reggae-rooted Jewish single that anchors its devotional message in a refrain sung in both Hebrew and English: "Everything I do, it's for You, Hakodesh Baruch Hu."
The track leans hard into reggae's sonic toolkit. iZZy D JaY's production layers offbeat guitar rhythms and a deep melodic bassline beneath Muchnik's vocals, with rhythmic call-and-response passages driving the arrangement forward. A standout melodic guitar lick lands mid-track, and the chorus is built for the kind of communal singing that reggae has always done best. The groove is easy and unhurried, but the emotional weight is there.
Thematically, the song functions as a straightforward declaration of devotion to Hakodesh Baruch Hu, the Holy Blessed One, with the central line cycling through in both languages so the sentiment lands regardless of where a listener sits on the Hebrew-fluency spectrum. That bilingual choice is practical and pointed: it opens the song's spiritual core to the broadest possible audience while keeping the Jewish textual tradition intact.
The source material also references a track called "YOMA" in connection with this release, describing it as channeling "the joyful spirit of reggae while turning it into a heartfelt love song to the Almighty." Whether "YOMA" is a separate song or an alternate title for "All For You" has not been confirmed; the official credits list "All For You" as the release title.
Credits on the project are a tight family and collaborator affair. Muchnik composed and performed the vocals, iZZy D JaY handled production, and cover art came from Moishe Muchnik. The collaboration marks another point in an ongoing creative partnership between the California-based shliach and the producer, with this release representing their latest reggae-influenced work together.
The convergence of reggae structure and Jewish worship content is not entirely new territory in the Jewish music world, but the production approach here, built from the rhythm section up with genre-faithful instrumentation rather than simply borrowing reggae aesthetics as decoration, gives "All For You" a more committed sonic identity than many crossover attempts manage.
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