Yossi Green

He regularly performs at charity benefits accompanied by popular Jewish singers under the rubric "Yossi Green & Friends".

[2] His father had served as a Rav in Timișoara, Romania, and was a devout follower of the Satmar Rebbe, Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum.

[2] When Yossi was an infant, his father moved the family to Williamsburg, New York, in order to be close to the Rebbe, and worked as a mashgiach in a butcher shop.

During this time he heard Roberta Flack's "Killing Me Softly with His Song" playing from a passing car, and it inspired him to write his own version of soul music, "Kol Berama", which was featured on a Pirchei London album under the direction of Yigal Calek[3] and became an international hit.

[4] Green composes songs for the superstars of the Orthodox Jewish music world, including Mordechai Ben David, Avraham Fried, Dov Levine, Yaakov Shwekey, Shloime Dachs, Mendy Wald, Shlomo Simcha, Yeedle Werdyger,[4] Shloime Gertner,[8] Ohad Moskowitz,[9] Dedi Graucher,[6] Gad Elbaz, Shulem Lemmer, Mendy Werdyger, Meir Sherman, Ari Klein and Itzik Dadya.

[6] His compositions have also been performed by Cantors Yitzchak Meir Helfgot,[4] Benzion Miller, Israel Rand, Naftali Hershtik, and Yakov Motzen.

His Hasidic music has been performed by Abish Brodt, Isaac Honig, Dov Hoffman, and Lipa Shmeltzer.

The concert returned to the Lincoln Center in 2003 for a second sell-out performance, this time featuring appearances by Dudu Fisher, Yaakov Shwekey, Mendy Wald, Ohad Moskowitz, Shloime Simcha, and Dov Levine.

[12][13] On the first anniversary of the storm, Green wrote a new song, "Hodu l'Hashem ki tov" (Give thanks to God, for He is good), which he performed at a community gala and Hachnosas Sefer Torah in Sea Gate.