Shlomo Ari Gaisin is an American singer and songwriter. He is best known as the lead singer for the Jewish rock band JudaBlue and the Hasidic folk group Zusha.
Gaisin grew up in Kemp Mill, Maryland, the youngest of seven children.[1][2] His parents, who both became baalei teshuva before he was born,[3] were founding members of the Kemp Mill Synagogue, a local Modern Orthodox shul.[4] They also played instruments at home and exposed him to classical music early on.[1][5] He studied jazz for seven years as a child.[6]
While in seventh grade at Berman, Gaisin met classmate Yaniv Hoffman, a fellow music enthusiast, and began playing with him. They formed JudaBlue in 2004, although they didn't begin rehearsing regularly until 2007.
The band released its debut EP, Forty Days, on January 19, 2010, shortly before going on hiatus to allow Gaisin and Hoffman to study in Israel. When they returned, the band released three more songs, "Falling", "Change", and "Oneness", before Hoffman returned to Israel in 2011 to serve in the IDF.
Gaisin moved to Washington HeightsinManhattan, where he met fellow musicians Elisha Mlotek and Zachariah Goldschmiedt through a mutual friend. The three began playing together and formed Zusha in 2013. Their self-titled debut EP, released on November 28, 2014, reached No. 9 on Billboard's World Albums chart.
Gaisin was engaged to Chanalee Elhyani in September 2019,[2] and the couple married in January 2020.[3] When announcing the birth of his second daughter in November 2022 via Zusha's Instagram, it was remarked that Gaisin now had "almost as many kids as albums".[10] Gaisin's father passed away in 2019, and his death influenced the Zusha album When the Sea Splits.[11]
Gaisin has been a follower of Hasidism since high school[6] and appeared on the Winter 2014 cover of Jewish Action promoting an article about neo-Hasidism.[12] He has expressed a broad admiration for all strains of Hasidism, stating that "there exists in each one a complete form of the holy Baal Shem Tov."[8]