Today marks the official release of A.B. Original‘s debut album, the not-so-subtly titled Reclaim Australia. The combination of Briggs and Trials, also of Funkoars, is unbelievably powerful. Apart, the two create excellent music, but together, they’re unstoppable. Kind of like an Australian Run The Jewels.
Reclaim Australia is by far the most vital, relevant and necessary Australian album of 2016. It speaks with anger, with adamance, with extremely powerful conviction, all set to ridiculously big beats, and vocal hooks from Gurrumul, Dan Sultan, Thelma Plum, Detroit’s Guilty Simpson and more.
The record has been celebrated throughout the last few days as album of the week over at Triple J, and today the pair took part in Like A Version. They performed one song of their own, the confronting and heavy January 26, which features Dan Sultan both on the record and Like A Version. The track addresses the major problems with celebrating Australia Day on January 26 head-on. Ironically, its heavy rotation on Triple J had a huge role in spotlighting the issue with hosting the Hottest 100 on January 26; although the station has not rescheduled the event this year, this track will hopefully make its way to the very top.
Following their original track came an unbelievable cover of Paul Kelly‘s 1992 classic Dumb Things, one of Australian rock’s most iconic songs ever. Joining Briggs and Trials was Dan Sultan once more, along with an extra special guest – the man himself, Paul Kelly. The heavy beats inject a feverish energy to the song we all know so well, and both Briggs and Trials deliver spitfire verses, showing off their hard-hitting lyricism and tremendous stronghold over rhythm and rhyme. From discussing black face to being complacent towards racism, there’s a lot of dumb things highlighted.
The internal relevance of choosing this song for their LAV has not gone unnoticed either; the lyric “Paul Kelly with the belly did them Dumb Things” appears on Reclaim Australia’s second last track I C U.
This will no doubt go down as one of the year’s best Like A Versions, and there’s been a lot of ’em. Certainly it’s the most relevant and important LAV – much like their album.
Watch below:
https://youtu.be/EdHQNJYZFeg
https://youtu.be/ICcewg7fxho
Dialogue is great, action is better: The case for moving the Hottest 100
Image: Twitter
It’s difficult to recall an album that can rival the debut effort of Briggs & Trial‘s project A.B. Original, Reclaim 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 Sultan, January 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
Briggs and Trials are at the forefront of the socially and politically conscious hip-hop movement that is slowly starting to pick up speed across Australia. Increasingly fed up with the plight of their people, and the consequent racism and systemic disadvantage they suffer, Briggs and Trials have remained strong in the face of continued adversity- never once letting go of their individual messages. Proud of their heritages (coming from the the Yorta Yorta and Ngarrindjeri tribes respectively), Briggs and Trials aren’t afraid to be outspoken, so it only makes sense that they join forces for a new, even more outspoken venture together.
Briggs won Album Of The Year at the National Indigenous Music Awards, whereas Trials has worked with just about everyone in the Australian hip-hop scene, from Drapht to Hilltop Hoods and more. Together, now as A.B. Original, the duo have been making their own music inspired by N.W.A and West Side Connection, after forming last year at triple J‘s Beat The Drum event, celebrating 40 years of the radio station. Performing a short but powerful set, a particular highlight was the special performance of the Gurrumul collaboration, The Hunt. Now, they are ready to take their new songs to the people by joining Hilltop Hoods on their national tour this April.
With a debut album in the works coming out later this year, it’s safe to say we can expect to hear a lot more from A.B. Original in the very near future. For now, check out their latest single, 2 Black 2 Strong below, as well as the tour dates for their Hilltop Hoods tour.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAGvcOkCc2c
Saturday 2 April – Allphones Arena, Sydney NSW
Friday 8 April – Brisbane Entertainment Centre, QLD
Saturday 16 April – Adelaide Entertainment Centre, SA (sold out)
Saturday 23 April – Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne VIC
Saturday 30 April – Perth Arena, WA
Tickets available here
Groovin’ The Moo
Monday 25 April – Groovin’ The Moo Oakbank
http://gtm.net.au/