“CHEAP JAPANESE BASS” by Steve Lieberman
- Levi
- 11 hours ago
- 1 min read

Steve Lieberman, the self-proclaimed Gangsta Rabbi and King of Jewish Punk, returns with Cheap Japanese Bass, the explosive lead single from his 85th album—yes, 85th. Rooted in militia punk chaos and packed with raw, unfiltered energy, this track is both a throwback and a fresh burst of creative madness from a true underground icon.
Inspired by Lieberman’s early days as a bassist and singer in the 1970s, Cheap Japanese Bass is a distorted, high-voltage tribute to a lifetime of DIY rebellion. He channels decades of musical grit into a lo-fi, sonic assault—proving that age is no match for attitude. With Lieberman playing 25 instruments on the album, listeners can expect a one-man wall of sound that’s as unpredictable as it is relentless.
The song stands out not just for its manic energy, but for what it represents: the ongoing saga of a punk outsider who never quit. Available now on Spotify, SoundCloud, YouTube, and ReverbNation, Cheap Japanese Bass is messy, loud, and proud—everything punk should be.
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