Some of Australia’s best hip-hop artists have teamed up with NITV and Start VR for a powerful new track, Change The Date. With January 26 right around the corner, the conversation about changing the date of Australia Day could not be more relevant nor important. The track, which is not only powerful, but really great on a musical level, is bound to make people think twice before throwing “another genocide on the BBQ,” as Birdz spits.

The track and its accompanying video features some of Australia’s best talent with rhymes including Urthboy and Ozi Batla from The Herd, ThundamentalsTuka and Jeswon, L-Fresh the Lion, Nooky, Birdz (Nathan Bird), Kaylah Truth, Tasman Keith, both Erica and Sally of Coda Conduct, and Hau. The video is an impressive 360-degree affair put together by Sydney-based virtual reality studio Start VR in partnership with National Indigenous Television (NITV) and SBS.

Hip-hop has given a formidable voice to Indigenous MCs who are using their platform to spread the message and open our eyes to the life of their people. Last year in particular saw hip-hop jump leaps and bounds ahead in terms of really taking a stance, spearheaded by powerhouse duo A.B. Original and their phenomenal protest track January 26.

Change The Date is another big step towards educating the community to acknowledge that Aboriginal people consider January 26 to be a day of mourning for many obvious reasons. Each artist delivers a powerful verse, with no holding back or sugarcoating the message.

The video was released in conjunction with NITV’s Always Will Be Festival leading up to January 26th. Check out the video below, be sure to drag the video around the cypher to heck out everything going on. The lyrics to the track are also available on the SBS website.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4vf8uF1rq0

On the creation of the video, Start VR Managing Director Angus Stevens said, “when NITV reached out to us we immediately said yes. It’s exciting to be a part of something that you believe in and to be able to join the conversation by using our VR and 360 video experience to explore the debate to change the date has been fantastic.

“VR allows the viewer to really feel like they’re in the room with the artists, and this project encapsulates that sense of immediacy and intimacy,” Stevens added “It’s been a great experience to work with NITV and we can’t wait for everyone to check it out.”

Image: SBS

It cannot be denied that 2016 has been the year of Australian hip-hop. From Remi and A.B Original to Koi Child, L-Fresh the Lion and beyond, we have never enjoyed a more diverse, rich, meaningful, and simply excellent output from a kind of local music that has long been stereotyped and cast aside. The latest in this incredible run of homegrown tunes comes from hip-hop OG Hau, with new single Everything featuring production from Miracle and a guest hook from grime rapper Footsie, who will be in town over New Years as part of grime two-piece Newham Generals alongside D Double E.

While Hau is best known to the public for his hip-hop program on Triple J, his own bars are as engaging as those he spins on air. The track opens with sparse synths and a heavy, weighted beat, the perfect complement to his deep husk. “Music, my medicine, more inspired than I’ve ever been,” Hau says. “Resurrect the true essence of hip-hop with a new message.” Meanwhile, Footsie’s hook is the perfect addition to the fiery track, with his own flow injecting an edginess so unique to that grime sound.

Speaking in more detail about the track, Hau explains: “The song has no real deep meaning to it. As you can hear, it bounces between the subjects of being inspired more now that I’m older to putting other MCs in check, to being honoured that I’m working with a legend like Footsie. So in a lot of ways, the content reflects the title.

“I also wanted to show that over this style of production – whether you feel it’s trap or grime – you don’t necessarily have to rhyme about the certain subjects usually found on these records; women, drugs, gun talk etc.”

It’s been a big year for Hau, whose last single, Sleep ft. Sarah Corry came out back in September, and he’s also featured on tracks by A.B Original and Miracle among others. Fans can look forward to more coming in 2017, but in the meantime, consider Everything a reintroduction to the newly reinvigorated MC. “After feeling all caged up, this is a taste of me,” he spits.

Listen below, and you can purchase the track here via Bandcamp.

Image: Tristan Stefan Edouard

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

It started off innocently enough.

Detroit rapper Danny Brown posted a picture to Instagram. The photo had been captured by Howl & Echoes photographer Michelle Grace Hunder at his concert in Melbourne last week.

Howl & Echoes has become increasingly vigilant about artists posting our photos without credit, following a recent issue where A$AP Rocky didn’t just post one of our images without credit, but actually used it to promote a new song. Each time we find uncredited photos, we either ask the artists’ publicist or management to add one in, or sometimes we go to the artist direct via social media. Nine out of every ten times, a credit is added – occasionally begrudgingly, usually apologetically. Even A$AP’s team eventually apologised and added one in.

Not Danny Brown.

Read more: Music piracy isn’t okay and neither is photo piracy. Stop stealing our images.

Hunder stated that this wasn’t the first time Brown had used one of her photos without credit. Not willing to let it slide again, we decided to ask him.

He follows us on Twitter, so I got down in the DMs:

images-article-2016-05-01-Slack+for+iOS+Upload-1

He then immediately deleted the photo, unfollowed us and our photographer across all social media mediums.

He could’ve just said no if it was that big of a deal. The time it took to respond, delete the image, find and unfollow us on socials surely took far more effort than just adding a credit.

A few hours later, the topic was picking up some traction on Twitter. Then, Brown posted the following:

https://twitter.com/xdannyxbrownx/status/726785919399796737

Really? Reallllllllly?

Twitter was already going off last night, and by the time I woke up this morning it had already been picked up by at least one photography website, as well as a massive thread unfolding on Reddit. Pedestrian have also just posted all of Brown’s hilariously OTT deleted tweets, during which he somehow proceeds to challenge Project U’s Nic Kelly to a fight in Sydney this afternoon.

To clear it up for those who have been speculating: The photo was taken at Danny Brown’s concert. Hunder and Howl & Echoes had been approved by Live Nation to shoot the show. It’s not like it was an unwarranted paparazzi shot. These images are approved by the touring company and no doubt contractually agreed to by Brown and his management ahead of the tour.

We have removed the photo gallery from our website, so for the record, this is the image in question:

Here's a damn good photo of Danny Brown taken by Michelle Grace Hunder for Howl & Echoes

Here’s a damn good photo of Danny Brown taken by Michelle Grace Hunder for Howl & Echoes

I find it interesting and disappointing that so many people believe there’s no merit to photography and no need to credit photographers. Photography is as much an art form as anything else, and there’s as much copyright and ownership in photography as there is in music. Furthermore, most music photographers work completely for free. Often, a simple tag or credit can make all the difference in getting their work seen and attracting future work.

We’ve had a great response from the Australian hip-hop community. First, 360 explained why an artist can think that it’s okay to use photos without credit, but that he’s faced the consequences himself:

L-Fresh the Lion sent us the following statement:

It ain’t hard to tag a photographer in a post. It’s the least an artist can do to show an appreciation for the photographer’s work.

If you’re sharing their photo in the first place, it means you must like it. So credit the person who made that moment happen.
 
We all work together to make music accessible. Artists make the music, promoters help put on a show, venues host it, fans support by artists in so many ways, videographers with the visuals, and photographers documenting it all happening. The list goes on. We all work together to make it what it is so people can enjoy what we have to share.

Hau also had this to add:

Not crediting a photographer is mad disrespectful. I realise some artists may not be familiar with the protocol, but once you have been hipped to the game, you should act accordingly. How hard is it to credit someone for their hard work? It’s like if a producer makes you a beat, you release the song and you don’t credit them for producing the song. That’s some sucker shit!”

Coda Conduct chimed in on Twitter:

fave

While Briggs added the following words of wisdom:

https://twitter.com/BriggsGE/status/726932806379544576

Look. Danny Brown is just plain wrong in his thinking that it’s okay to not credit photographers. That’s not how it works at all, and he should know this by now, considering he’s well into his second decade in the music industry. This issue seriously got out of hand. We’re glad that so many people are now discussing photo crediting and copyright as it’s a huge, ongoing issue for music photographers in this country and no doubt beyond, and hopefully this can help to clear up confusion for those who aren’t aware of how important this it.

What’s disappointing is that this issue has spiralled out of control, and that the main focus has now been this weird Twitter fight between Brown and Kelly. While that’s hilarious for sure, it’s totally missing the point of this issue. It’s upsetting that so many publications and outlets, including triple j, have chosen to focus on this issue while almost entirely ignoring the main point about photography, but I can’t exactly say I’m surprised.

Don’t be like Danny. Artists, credit the photographer just like you would a sample or literally any other kind of creative output.

Image: Michelle Grace Hunder/Twitter