
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 January 2023.
1. WINKY D - EUREKA EUREKA
On January 1, , which blasts the ZANU-PF government and its derailing of the country’s decolonisation. Its track “Dzimba Dzemabwe” asks: “Is this the land we cry for, we die for?” The song “Ibotso”, meanwhile, rails against divisive policies that keep the poor killing each other “whilst the authors of their misery and poverty remain unscathed”. The album sparked a backlash from pro-government forces, including the Economic Empowerment Group, which arranged a press conference where it called for Winky D to be de-platformed. Its move followed similar actions against Zimbabwean protest musicians in the past. A week later, the African People’s Socialist Party held an update on a copycat crackdown on the African diaspora in the US. The move came after the US Federal Bureau of Investigation targeted party members in raids last July.
2. RASHA NAHAS - AMRAT
On January 26, , including two civilians, Palestinians said. The move followed controversial Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s return to power with the country’s most right-wing government yet, supported by Australia. A week earlier, Palestinian musician Rasha Nahas released her new album, recorded in the occupied Golan Heights. The record expresses her longing for home and on its title track, she sings of reclaiming the city of Haifa. The album followed the release of US-based , which addresses similar repression in his home country. There was hope to the north, however, as . That followed the release of . Discussing it, they said: “We represent the underclass… and a vision of a world without borders.”
3. RUSSKAJA - TURBO POLKA PARTY
“No Borders” is also a standout track on the new album by self-described “Russian Turbo Polka Metal” band Russkaja, released on a January 5 single as Russia continued to wage war on Ukraine. On it, they sing: “Bombs are falling again, can you understand? It's the 21st century and nothing has changed. Digital media is blinding our eyes, turning friends into enemies with all those lies. The hunt is on just like in ancient times. Open fire on our brothers who cross the line. We're puppets of dictators again and again. I see the more things change the more they stay the same. No borders, no wars, we’re equal, all the same. No nations, no fighting, just stop this fucking game.” The record came as activists fought for the release of Ukrainian journalist and human rights campaigner Maksym Butkevytch, now held by Russia as a prisoner of war. Butkevytch founded the No Borders Project, which defends refugees.
4. ANTI-FLAG - LIES THEY TELL OUR CHILDREN
On January 6, a Pentagon document revealed that the US had lied about Afghan civilians killed in a 2021 drone strike. The same day, US political punk stalwarts Anti-Flag released their aptly-titled new album, Lies They Tell Our Children, which also blasts borders and wars. On the opening track, "Sold Everything", they holler: "Well, they sold all our bodies, collected our names, sold all our fears, stole all our birthdates. Every thought we have exchanged for windfall. If they gave you nothing, you'd have nothing at all. Fuck all their borders and fuck all their wars, the violence of Wall Street and profiteer cures. Neoliberal white saviours, Murdoch and Fox News. Fuck the Pittsburgh Police and the President, too." Discussing the record's intent, they said: “, and those people can change the fucking world.”
5. MARGO PRICE - STRAYS
On January 23, . The 1973 US Supreme Court decision protected abortion rights, but the court reversed the decision last June. On January 13, US country musician Margo Price released her new album. It includes after she passed by a women’s health clinic before the Roe v Wade decision was reversed. “The song feels like a premonition now, with women’s rights being stripped and all the abortion bans happening,” she said. The album followed the release of a , which includes the anthem “United Women Of The World”, and the , titled Precious Rage. On January 13, their fellow in Canberra amid an ugly new anti-abortion debate among Australian politicians.
6. DISPLEASURE - VORTEX OF SHIT
On January 19, New Zealand’s Prime Minister. The move prompted countless eulogies in the media contrasting male world leaders' cruelty with her more "compassionate" politics. Taking a more critical view of her country’s political scene is the , the “digital subsidiary” of punk trio Unsanitary Napkin, who released a scathing album last year. They say the new record tackles “the swirling mess of scaremongering bullshit rearing its increasingly ugly head in political discourse in Aoetearoa … things have reached the point where disgruntled science-denying farmers are teaming up with perverse toilet-obsessed transphobes, raging anti-vaxxers and evangelical megachurch despots in a horrific whirlpool of shit ideas manipulated by white supremacists and alt-right trolls”.
7. SERJ TANKIAN - MADOFF: THE MONSTER OF WALL STREET
On January 4, streaming giant Netflix launched a show about infamous Ponzi scheme fraudster Bernie Madoff. The series is impressively soundtracked by Serj Tankian, who also fronts the hugely successful political metal band System Of A Down. “It’s right that this deep dive is more concerned with the how than the why,” said . Yet surely, given the way the average global citizen is constantly bombarded with messages to consume, the only surprising thing about Madoff’s tale is why more people like him haven’t been exposed. , was clearly brainwashed by luxury brands’ advertising. And America’s latest version, , has ridden the worldwide belief in . Yet financial yet.
8. IGGY POP - EVERY LOSER
Netflix’s Madoff show came as such mindless capitalist consumerism continued to wreck the planet. On January 5, it was reported that Australian . The same day, The Sydney Morning Herald reported a . On January 17, activists were sentenced for stopping a train from the Australian coal mine owned by billionaire . The same day, for protesting against coal in Germany. On January 25, it was revealed US president Joe Biden had granted more oil and gas permits than his predecessor, Donald Trump. And on January 6, the same day that , punk legend Iggy Pop released in his beloved Miami.
9. ZIGGY RAMO - SUGAR COATED LIES
Also despairing at the eco-vandalism is the new album from Aboriginal rapper Ziggy Ramo. Released on January 26 —the day some Australians celebrate the 1788 arrival of the country’s European invaders, while others protest against the celebration —it came with a warning. “Every day is invasion day on stolen land. I’m Blak all the time, not just on the 26th of January. I’ve never called myself political, I’ve never called myself an activist. I am a human being. I make music about my lived experience, which is inherently deemed political because I’m Blak ... I don’t want to change the date, I want to change the entire state." It followed albums by , which laments the destruction of the land, and , which raises the enviro alarm on its song “Hot Planet”.
10. SONGS OF DISAPPEARANCE - AUSTRALIAN FROG CALLS
Joining the chorus of alarm is the by Songs Of Disappearance, whose previous album about endangered birds soared to No.2 on Australia's ARIA charts. "The majority of recordings on this album are high-quality public recordings of threatened frog species submitted to the national FrogID project," said the record's producers. "This project, being promoted as part of FrogID Week, shows that Australians will not allow these precious voices to be silenced." The album, which eventually , came after the COP15 United Nations Biodiversity Conference in Montreal. That summit, which received far less attention than the COP27 climate conference just weeks earlier, highlighted the dire state of species loss. It came as companies began mining seabeds, threatening further environmental collapse worldwide.
Video:Winky D ft Shingai-Dzimba Dzemabwe -.
Want to get this column every month? Just email matwardmusic@gmail.com and I'll add you to my monthly email that includes a link to this column here at鶹ӳ.Yes, I want to read this column every month.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Mat Ward has been writing for鶹ӳsince 2009. He also wroteandmakespolitical music.You can stream ordownload, freefor a limited time.
Stream our new.This replacesat more than 700 albums.
Read about.
Stream.
Thesays: "There are few other newspapers — radical or any other kind — that draw together news and analysis that is as well informed, credible, and non-sectarian as鶹ӳ. Its work has influenced mine and has been a beacon to those who believe the press ought to be an agent of the people."