It’s difficult to recall an album that can rival the debut effort of Briggs & Trial‘s project A.B. OriginalReclaim Australia, for cultural importance and significance. In press materials for the album, Ryan Griffen (conceiver of incredible, groundbreaking ABC show Cleverman) acknowledges that “many people aren’t ready for this”, and he’s right – most probably only need to scroll through their newsfeeds a few times to find examples of ugly, unrepentant racism. There’s no question that some people are not open to listening to a Yorta Yorta man and a Ngarrindjeri man spit, with straight-backed conviction, about racism in Australia. And that alone proves that this album is absolutely essential.

There is no hand-holding on Reclaim Australia. The title alone, blatantly mocking the name of a particularly racist group, should tell you that. This is not a gentle reminder about how Racism Is Bad. This is righteous anger that presents the facts of lived experiences, and in case there was any doubt, A.B. Original do not give a fuck if that makes you uncomfortable. It should. It should make you think, question, act. In the album’s Intro, the legendary Archie Roach asserts that in order to make these realities heard, you have to “get in their faces”. So that’s exactly what Briggs & Trials do.

A.B. Original’s debut track 2 Black 2 Strong, which came out in March this year, is a celebration of bravado and strength, positioning the duo as one that doesn’t hesitate to deride those who contribute to a system that devalues them. This song was my introduction and I was instantly hooked. That filthy brassy motif, squelching so satisfyingly alongside lines like “I hit you with that Andrew Bolt of lightning”, and all the while dismantling pressure for First Nation’s people to be placid or peaceful in the face of their ongoing systemic degradation? These are the voices that Australian music needs more of. On Reclaim Australia, the voices that have been consistently muffled and ignored are seizing the spotlight that was always rightfully theirs.

Call Em Out, featuring Guilty Simpson rails viciously against the idea that call-out culture is toxic or unhelpful. To hammer the point home, the track is peppered with atrociously racist and unfortunately all-too-real voice clips with media personalities and politicians suggesting that those with mixed heritages are somehow dangerous, or that white nationalist eugenics are an option, or many other disgusting things. It’s abhorrent, and these are things that people have really said. People continue to say and do similarly disgusting things, and the crux of a culture that glosses over that sort of behaviour is police murdering unarmed First Nation’s people and get away on a manslaughter charge or less.

That is the reality of Australia in 2016, and A.B. Original are determined that everyone get the message. It’s not the only track on the album about police violence: this is a theme that’s revisited several times. From Caiti Baker‘s feature on Dead In A Minute, unpacking what it is to live constantly looking over your shoulder, fearing you’ll become a target if you aren’t one already, to REPORT TO THE MIST, an unrelenting diatribe against the police. MIST affirms how completely unnecessary and unhelpful it is to defend the profession as a whole, when the culture permeating relentlessly through is violent and deadly for First Nation’s people. Quasi-literally fighting fire with fire, A.B. Original respond to the atrocities that continue to be committed with righteous antagonism.

January 26 is a masterclass in how to perform a perfect 10/10 fuck you to people who are racist and/or wilfully obtuse about the debate surrounding #ChangeTheDate. It’s a much bigger debate than simply changing the date of triple j’s Hottest 100, and a much more significant one, historically speaking. Featuring Dan SultanJanuary 26 ferociously pokes gigantic, gaping holes in the shaky logical fallacies that advocates of leaving “Australia Day” as is often spurt. Unfortunately (but sadly not unanticipated), certain shit-stains have decided that this song is “racist against white people” and have been whinging about it all over their chosen false kingdoms, the comment sections. The more moderate shit-stains – more like skid marks – have simply turned to tone policing, wringing their hands in a disingenuous “why can’t we all just get along?” rhetoric. But A.B. Original have no time for coddling those who choose not to educate themselves and nor should they. I turn the other cheek, I get a knife in my back/And I tell ’em it hurts, they say I overreact/So fuck that (fuck that!)

There’s definitely no shortage of star appearances here, lending their voices to hammer these messages well and truly home. Firing Squad, with its swung drum machine and washed-out synth lines features Hau, and ICU features Thelma Plum, who by the way needs to release new music because I love her deeply. On the track, she sings an insightful chorus hook – You’re too busy watching me when you need to watch yourself – encouraging people not to pass judgements that fail to take into account personal histories along with a larger social context. Compton MC King T comes to the table for The Feast, lampooning attitudes that feed directly into a system that is run by and for white people at the direct expense and oppression of First Nation’s people. Reclaim Australia wraps on Gurrumul-featuring track Take Me Home, which you may recognise as being used on Cleverman, which also features Briggs. Through the anger felt over 200 years, there’s a sense of wistful, almost mournful longing for freedom and peace in their home – a place that has been ripped from First Nation’s people and ruled as an invading police state since the first fleet of European settlers arrived.

This album is, unequivocally, a landmark album that will continue to push boundaries of people’s perception, their preconceived notions of race and justice, and set a new standard for constructive dialogue and the valuing of the voices of First Nation’s people for decades to come. Its importance cannot be overstated – it could inspire and motivate a generation. It deserves, without a doubt, to be crowned the best Australian release of the year. If Reclaim Australia offends you, then I’d recommend listening to it on a loop until you wake up from your fragile grip on reality.

Read more: Briggs Appears On The Weekly To Sort Out The ‘Invasion’ Discussion

Image: A.B. Original

Kimbra – Sweet Relief 

Grammy winner Kimbra is back with her first new song since 2014 and we’ve already got the visuals to go along with it. Sweet Relief is  smooth groove of an electro-pop explosion filled with texture, colour and some very Prince and Janet Jackson vibes. It makes total sense then that the video plays into this, with brightly coloured waves of silk and shaggy hair set against vibrant backdrops that move so realistically you’d almost believe you could reach through your screen to touch them.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cSzBG8awAW0&feature=youtu.be

Dan Sultan – Magnetic

The new video from Dan Sultan is a thing of art. Digital printing art to be precise. It took 60 individual 3D prints and 2,700 images to put together the singing bust in the likeness of the country’s Number One Crooner as patterns and coloured lights are projected onto the statue as he sings and evolves through different states, changing texture and finish throughout. The video progresses in stop motion with the bust eventually being covered in moss, meaning that the entire thing took a casual two months to complete.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAPBzsCidow&feature=youtu.be

Devendra Banhart – Saturday Night

Having dropped his ninth full length album, Ape In Pink Marble last month, Devendra Banhart has been pretty busy of late. Now, he’s shared the video for Saturday Night – a soft and surreal clip which sees the singer/songwriter/guitarist singing in a dimly lit bar, cradling a wide-eyed baby and accompanied by an Afghan hound. Pretty close to a three minute David Lynch movie, it’s weird and wonderfully colourful.

Read our interview with Devendra Banhart

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wD1j0CiBV0U

Jack Grace – All Lost

Sydney songwriter and producer Jack Grace’s track All Lost has been doing the rounds a whole lot lately and now there’s a video to match the piano ballad. Just as the song itself sits somewhere between deliberately spaced and uptempo, the video has all the action of a fencing tournament but is slowed down with opposing angles and close ups. There’s a certain ghostly feeling that resonates throughout the track and the clip alike, making it all the more captivating viewing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1p_i5AR7yHM

Lime Cordiale – Waking Up Easy

The new video from Sydney’s Lime Cordiale is a soft, sunny clip that starts with a hangover and develops into something bigger. The song an acoustic meander about waking up to something unexpectedly familiar, the video follows the beginnings of a romance between two friends. With the polarising same-sex marriage plebiscite currently polarising the country, it is the band’s gentle comment on the importance of equality and acceptance.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yc-xsaqbgYA

Midas.Gold – Work it Out

Fresh from his Listen Out debut, Brisbane rapper Midas.Gold has now released the video for his third single, the brazen Work It Out. Yet another head churning, auto-tune laced banger, the video clip hilariously flips this into an 80s themed dance audition and performance. No doubt Midas is one to watch in these next few months.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upJnnohEUxg

 

Laurel – Hurricane

Writing, performing, recording, producing and mixing her EP completely in her East London apartment, the enchanting and inspiring Laurel has now added this personal reflection in the video for her single Hurricane. Recorded by her friend as they “messed around in the places we both liked to hang out”, the result is a charming guide through the city she calls home. Not to mention the soundtrack of which is a beautifully haunting and melancholic track where Laurel’s voice soars smoothly over the echoing instrumentation below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4X2gtwkeXw

Written by Ruby-Rose Pivet-Marsh and Martin McConnell

Image: Supplied

A.B. Original haven’t waited till January 26th to drop their second single, titled exactly that, and considering their first single was one of our favourites of 2016 so far, we are beyond fucking stoked that it’s the case.

Continuing their important work at the forefront of politically charged, socially conscious hip-hop in Australia, the duo, comprised of Briggs and Trials (NIMA and ARIA award winners respectively), have just dropped the follow up single to 2 Black 2 Strong, which was released earlier this year. January 26 is an in your face reminder of the history which that date truly holds in Australia, expressing “the annual frustration many Indigenous Australians feel from the farce of a holiday.”

Before we continue, hats must go off to Briggs and Trials for staring down the barrel of the kind of stupidly ignorant shitstorm of a reaction a song with this message is bound to generate from right-wing dickheads, reaching into their large sack of fucks to give and finding it stone cold empty.

Opening with the unmistakably powerful vocal stylings of one of the finest crooners this country has ever produced in, Dan Sultan, the hook repeated throughout the song ensures the powerful message only gets stronger as the track progresses. The take away being that it is disgusting that ‘Australia Day’ is still considered a cause for celebration when it holds a such a significant and horrific history. A history that that cannot continue to go ignored or swept aside for the sake of pacifying the sensitivities of white Australia, hellbent on preserving an assumed right to spend the day getting drunk and messy in a twisted celebration of colonialism and genocide (“that’s that land-taking, flag-waving attitude”).

You can listen to the song here to catch all of the choice lines, including “you’re watching the telly for The Bachelor but wouldn’t read a book about a fuck load of massacres”, “I turn the other cheek I get a knife in my back/I tell them it hurts they say I overreact/so fuck that” and “white Oz still got a black history/but that shirt will get your banned from Parliament” over some of the finest, funkiest beats we’ve heard in a while.

Their debut album, titled Reclaim Australia will be released later this year via Hilltop Hoods’ label Golden Era Records and Briggs’ new Indigenous hip-hop label Bad Apples Music. The duo will also be making a special keynote appearance at BIGSOUND in September before heading to Melbourne on for a Rolling Stone Australia; Live Lounge showcase at The Workers Club.

Image: Supplied