Do you think there's no good protest music these days? So did I, until I started looking for it. The truth is, it鈥檚 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鈥檚 political news. Here鈥檚 the round-up for November 2023.
1. AMPLIFY PALESTINE BDS MIXTAPE - RISE UP: BDS MIXTAPE VOL.2听
Jewish people occupied Australian defence minister Richard Marles鈥 office On November 1, to protest against his government's support for Israel鈥檚 war on Gaza. In the following weeks, more and more Jews took part in huge rallies worldwide as . In response, activists Amplify Palestine released a fundraising album on November 3. "Inspired by the 1985 Sun City album from artists boycotting apartheid South Africa", its sales support Palestinian cultural initiatives. On its second track, Palestinian emcee Prince Alfarra raps: "In the alleyways of streets, barriers prevent the dreams of residents and farmers... my kuffiyah [head-dress] is my address, and your barriers will never be able to erase that." A week later, Belfast artist , which opens with the song "When People Are Occupied Resistance Is Justified". 听
2. SAM DRAISEY - THE REVOLUTION WILL BE LIVE (AT CODSALL BEER FESTIVAL)
As Holmes was releasing his album, punk-rap duo Sleaford Mods and IDLES for not speaking out on Palestine. Over the next fortnight, Pulp, Bikini Kill, Tom Morello, Zack de la Rocha and Brian Eno joined . The sentiment was summed up by English folk-punk musician Sam Draisey, who calls for listeners to on his new protest album, released on November 3. On "Where's The Border Anyway?" he sings: "There must be a better way than living like this day to day. Yeah, well that's why I'm here to say: Where's the border anyway?" A fortnight later, British punks Fatal Blow released a new album on which that crosses borders to kill millions. It came as activists protested against profit-seeking arms exporters worldwide. 听
3. TIME - DEPRESSED JOY 听
As Merri-bek council in Naarm/Melbourne voted to fly the Palestinian flag on November 8, independent councillor Monica Harte - who is originally from Ireland - said such a debate 鈥渨ould never happen in an Irish council, because and the country is full of Palestinian flags鈥. Making similar connections is US rapper Time, who addressed Palestine throughout in August and namechecks Irish political prisoner Bobby Sands on his latest high-quality long-player, released on November 10. On the same day, experimental Irish folk musician John Francis Flynn released his innovative new LP, which and "warped" view of the Irish overseas. A fortnight later, his fellow Irish folk musicians by the venue due to the band's "political stance" in supporting Palestine.
4. JK-47 - REVISION FOR REGROWTH听
A woman whose parents were refugees from the Nazis revealed on November 3 that her fellow Jews lambasted her when she spoke up for Palestinians at a council meeting in Gadi/Sydney a week earlier. "My comment that, like many of them, many of my family were consumed in the Holocaust ovens, was greeted with 'Pity you weren鈥檛!'," Vivienne Porzsolt said. "There were even howls of protest when I began my speech with an Acknowledgement of Country." Such would come as no surprise to award-winning Bundjalung rapper JK-47, who released his sophomore album on November 3. On its opening track he raps: "Seen too many victims because of the system. Their mental's imprisoned, I'm givin' 'em keys." Ten days later, the family of , Wayne Ugle, said he had been begging for his medication before he died.
5. EMPTY COUNTRY - EMPTY COUNTRY II听
Likewise, it was revealed on November 10 that staff were watching movies when an in a West Australian cell a month earlier. The reputation of the law sank further on November 15, when a a woman and allegedly telling her he "knew how the system worked" and no one would believe her. That came days after the headmaster at a private Sydney school where a male sports coach killed his female colleague and 鈥渘ot a monster鈥. The headmaster's intention had been to emphasise that abusers are not easy to spot. But it brought to mind a lyric on the new album by US rockers Empty Country: Musicians likely to use such defences against , and . 听
6. OLADIPS - SUPERHERO ADUGBO (THE MEMOIR)听
One musician who's听fought violent cops was reported by the BBC to have听 on November 16. . Nigerian emcee Oladips, 28, raps about political issues such as the #ENDSars protests against police brutality in the west African nation. His last single was titled "Die Young", which came just weeks after protests over the death of another popular Nigerian musician, Mohbad. On he addresses the governor of Lagos state, Babajide Sanwo Olu, about armed forces' killing of peaceful protesters in Lagos. "Started with police brutality, then we protest," he raps. "We didn't know we were dealin' with government with no sense... Thank you for your concern, condolence and the pain. But you don't even post full event on your page. Then your went on LIVE and you lied 'nobody died'. This generation is broke bro." 听
7. THE RESISTANCE COMPANY - ACTIVIST THERAPY SESSION
Also addressing police brutality is the new album from heavy New York indie rock activists The Resistance Company, released a fortnight earlier. On "Pig Roast" they seethe: "Don't you see all the blue in front of me, and on the side of me coming from behind me. Don't you try to cuff me little piggy. ACAB 'cos they are targeting me. They Keep pushing and shoving barricading me. Burning down the blue line and their billions." It came after for protesting against oil in Britain, for which she faced court on November 15. The band lash out at such insanity on the song "Heatwave", with the lines: "The Earth is warming. That's why we're swarming. This your final warning. In a heatwave (our cities are flooding). We're in a heatwave (the Arctic is burning). Burning in a heatwave (super storms are raging). Living in a heatwave (our future is on hold)."
8. ESCABROSO - VIOL鈥嬅娾婲CIA REVOLUCION鈥嬅佲婻IA
Graphically . The US at her concert in Brazil's Rio De Janeiro on November 17, minutes before -induced 59C heat. The concert's profit-hungry organisers had banned attendees from bringing their own water, leading Swift to throw her own bottles into the crowd. Two days later, neighbouring country Argentina elected a wild-haired, Donald Trump-loving new president, . Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva temporarily , in a sign of his former socialist self. Representing the kind of politics that once got Lula jailed are Brazilian punks Escabroso, whose incendiary new EP is "". 听
9. NO TURNING BACK - CONQUER听
Cut from the same Trump-loving cloth as Milei is Dutch far-right politician Geert Wilders. The anti-Muslim Eurosceptic - who wants to leave the EU, Brexit-style - began talks to on November 22. The same day, Dutch punks No Turning Back, who host Europe's largest annual indoor hardcore punk festival, released their new EP, which blasts such divisive politics. On its closing track, "Mental Block", they rage: "Creating rumours and starting wars. Ignorance is bliss that's how it always was. Divide and conquer, eliminate each other. It's one rule for the rich while the rest fight and suffer. These mental chains only bring pain. This mental block, this world is going insane. Get out of my way, don't hold me down. Demons among us, I can see them now... Our society's problems, this world will burn. Times are rough, we will never learn." 听
10. DOLLY PARTON - ROCKSTAR听
Such is the state of the world's politics that even long-in-the-tooth, apolitical mega stars have begun putting out political albums. Lol Tolhurst, who co-founded chart-topping goths The Cure, released his new album on November 3, which features on "Country Of The Blind". Tolhurst's fellow 1980s pop legends a week earlier, which rages against environmental destruction on songs such as "Anthropocene" and "Evolution Of Species". 听And at the end of the month, country music icon Dolly Parton released an album of heavy rock covers plus one original song, the seething "World On Fire", which last year. "Greedy politicians, present and past," she sings. "They wouldn鈥檛 know the truth if it bit 鈥檈m in the ass."
This column is taking a break and will return at the end of January.
Want to get this column every month? Just email matwardmusic@gmail.com and I鈥檒l add you to my monthly email that includes a link to this column here at听麻豆传媒.听Yes, I want to read this column every month.
[Mat Ward has been writing for听麻豆传媒听since 2009. He also wrote听听and听makes听political music. This year,听.]
Stream our new 鈥.听This replaces听听at more than 700 albums.
Read about听more political albums.
Stream听.
The听听says: 鈥淭here are few other newspapers 鈥 radical or any other kind 鈥 that draw together news and analysis that is as well informed, credible, and non-sectarian as听麻豆传媒. Its work has influenced mine and has been a beacon to those who believe the press ought to be an agent of the people.鈥