10 new albums that resist the police state

March 28, 2024
Issue 
Protest albums from March 2024

Do you think there's no good protest music these days? So did I, until I started looking for it. The truth is, it’s always been out there, but it's sometimes just a bit difficult to find. Every month, I search it out, listen to it all, then round up the best of it that relates to that month’s political news. Here’s the round-up for March 2024.

1. GRACE PETRIE - BUILD SOMETHING BETTER

Climate protesters for blocking traffic on Melbourne's West Gate Bridge on March 5. Police called their action "selfish". National broadcaster the ABC joined the pile-on with a story headlined: "". It did not cite its own story about . Nor did it ask the couple how they felt about being forced to deliver their son into a climate change-ravaged world that had just . Three days later, queer English protest singer Grace Petrie released her , on which she sings: "The scientists are sounding the alarm, everyone stay calm. The bailiffs have knocked down a family’s door, the oil profits soar. Some teenagers have blocked the motorway, so we locked them all away."

2. KID KAPICHI - THERE GOES THE NEIGHBOURHOOD

Also hitting back at police are on their heavy, catchy new album, released a week later. On "999", , whose on March 1. “So many cases," snarls singer Jack Wilson. "If they’re not rapists, they're fucking racists.” Discussing the album, Wilson said: , and that’s terrifying. Four or five people were having a peaceful protest for Palestine in my hometown of Hastings recently, and they got manhandled and arrested. It’s sickening, but then you look at the comments on social media and people are saying things like, ‘Stop wasting police time.' The police are wasting their own time! How can you be against people wanting to stop the death of others?"

3. MOOR MOTHER - THE GREAT BAILOUT

In a rare case of racist police being brought to justice, on March 21 for sexually assaulting and torturing two Black men for staying in a white woman’s home. Getting down to the roots of such Deep South racism is the , which records the songs and stories of slaves' descendants in Alabama. Digging further is revered African-American musician Moor Mother's new album about the British slave industry, released on March 8. On it, the groundbreaking experimental artist rails against the 1835 act that compensated 46,000 slave owners with £20 million (£17 billion or $33 billion today) for their lost “property” due to the legal abolition of slavery. “Think," she says, "not one of the enslaved received a penny in the form of compensation." Asked about the LP's motives, she told the media: “."

4. KIM GORDON - THE COLLECTIVE

Taking on such privileged white men is the new album from fabled Sonic Youth co-founder Kim Gordon, released as people worldwide rallied for International Women's on March 8. Discussing the song "I'm A Man" on the edgy, experimental record, she said: , going around saying that feminism destroyed masculinity, that it's not fair and feeling like victims... It's kind of hilarious to me that he feels like a victim, or that men are being victimised. Everything's dominated by white male power. But up through the '50s and into the ‘60s, when men still had the masculine role of protector and saviour — you know, the John Wayne, Ronald Reagan era masculinity — when that sort of faded and the culture changed... they became consumers like women, they were marketed to. So it's really capitalism that's spinning things this way."

5. MINISTRY - HOPIUMFORTHEMASSES

Industrial metal firebrands on the opening track of their new album, released a week earlier. On "BDE", which stands for "Big Dick Energy", sneers at "horny little boys full of hormones and hate, waging war on women 'cause they can't get a date". But he also aims his crosshairs at many other targets throughout the album, from racists and billionaires to climate change deniers and their corporations. "The documentation of facts that are given are constantly met with a dose of derision," he despairs on the album's lead single, "Just Stop Oil". "People are angry, and tensions are heightened. People are frightenеd, we're headеd off a cliff now. What do we want? They want action, action. What do we want? To let it all burn. What do we want? Just stop oil."

6. FRANK WALN - SONGS AGAINST COLONIALISM

Stopping oil is a primary concern for Native American rapper Frank Waln on his new album, Songs Against Colonialism, released on March 22. On "Oil 4 Blood", which was first released as a protest against the Keystone XL pipeline, he raps: "Make everything Red. Words of my ancestors up in my head. Food for thought, our kids underfed. Our oil is mud, they want the earth dead. Oil for blood, oil for blood. Making you rich, you soil my love. Oil for blood, oil for blood. My Mother is clean, that oil is mud." Indigenous people facing the same struggles against fossil fuel companies in Australia held the on March 2. But Waln's album documents the sordid history of such agreements. On "Treaties" a newsreader announces: "Since the founding of this country the US government has made and broken over 500 treaties with various Indian tribes all across our nation."

7. MOKOTRON - THE UNITED TRIBES OF BASS

Well aware of treaty treachery is electronic Maori musician Mokotron, whose people have been fighting the controversial Treaty Of Waitangi since it founded New Zealand in 1840. On March 22, he released his impeccably produced, bass-heavy remix album United Tribes Of Bass, on which Big Fat Raro takes his song "Colonised Existence" and creates a response, "Decolonize Existence". said Mokotron. "The remix is a lesson for me." Also damning what he calls the "ecocide" of colonists is former Midnight Oil singer , released a week earlier. But whereas Garrett has previously been defiant about his controversial political career, he appears to be on its closing track. On "Everybody", he confesses: “I find myself asking, ‘Could I have done more?’ I find myself asking, ‘Should I have done more?’"

8. AMIRTHA KIDAMBI'S ELDER ONES - NEW MONUMENTS

Garrett is a master musician revered worldwide. But even he pales in comparison with lesser-known jazz musician Amirtha Kidambi, whose new album, released on the same day, as it detonates colonialism. Kidambi's freewheeling vocals are matched only by the astounding acrobatics of her band as she constantly pushes the envelope in addressing Palestine, Asian-Black solidarity, and police violence. In the liner notes she describes how she learnt alto saxophone while playing at protests. “We noticed that holding instruments and playing music, often raucously and even joyously, was an immediate diffuser of tension," she writes. "I remember warding off arrest just by playing and singing, with an officer unsure of how to apprehend me with the horn in my hands.” Her album is probably the most original record you'll hear all year.

9. MR IRISH BASTARD - BATTLE SONGS OF THE DAMNED

Throughout March, other musicians joined Kidambi in slamming . Welsh singer for defending Palestinians on March 10. The same day, electronic musician in protest over treatment of Palestinian ensemble 47Soul. at the GLAAD Awards on March 14, one day after more than , including every Irish band on the bill, over its US military sponsorship. On March 15, two days before St Patrick's Day, German Irish folk punks Mr Irish Bastard released their . On "No Justice, No Peace" they express solidarity with African-Americans. But it's the anthemic "We’re All Irish on St Patrick’s Day" that's bound to send festival-goers into a frenzy worldwide.

10. JOE SOLO - SLEDGEHAMMER SONGS

Australian law firm Birchgrove Legal on March 5, accusing him and his cabinet of being accessories to the genocide in Gaza. Days later, Palestinian refugees fleeing Gaza for Australia , as Australian . Seemingly showing more compassion than the whole Australian cabinet is the from English protest singer Joe Solo, released on March 4. On "City Of Sanctuary", the long-time activist sings: "You've got food here. You've got shelter. You've got a home from home. You've come half way around the world, my brother, and there's no more need to be alone. If you're a refugee you're alright by me. If you're a refugee you're alright by me. If you're a refugee you're alright by me, in this city of sanctuary."


[Mat Ward has been writing for鶹ýsince 2009. He also wroteandmakespolitical music..]

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