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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Brute_(album)
rdf:type
schema:CreativeWork dbo:Work wikidata:Q482994 wikidata:Q386724 wikidata:Q2188189 dbo:MusicalWork owl:Thing schema:MusicAlbum dbo:Album
rdfs:label
Brute (album)
rdfs:comment
Brute is the second studio album of Kuwait musician Fatima Al Qadiri. A protest album inspired by events such as the 2015 Baltimore protests and the Ferguson unrest, the album regards the authoritarian power of law enforcement in the United States and the illusion of democracy existing in the western part of the world. Its cover art by Josh Kline, Babok Radboy, and Joerg Lohse is a photograph of one of the "police teletubbies" found in Kline's art piece "Freedom," which was intended to present how civil rights were being destroyed in the 21st century. Brute features samples of the Ferguson protest, an MSNBC report of Occupy Wall Street by Lawrence O'Donnell, and an interview with a former member of the LAPD regarding the power of the police.
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Brute
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n7:BruteFatimaAlQadiri.jpg?width=300
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6.9
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left
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dbr:Fatima_Al_Qadiri
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1
dbp:cover
BruteFatimaAlQadiri.jpg
dbp:footer
Events such as the Ferguson unrest and the Baltimore protests inspired Fatima Al Qadiri to make a protest record.
dbp:genre
dbr:Electronica dbr:Grime_(music_genre) dbr:Protest_music dbr:Experimental_music dbr:Dark_ambient dbr:Minimal_music
dbp:image
Ferguson Day 6, Picture 44.png FreddieGrayPrecinctProtest.jpg
dbp:label
dbr:Hyperdub
dbp:length
213.0 164.0 200.0 160.0 165.0 2179.0 250.0 290.0 178.0 111.0 212.0 236.0
dbp:mc
73
dbp:misc
0001-01-20
dbp:nextTitle
dbr:Shaneera
dbp:nextYear
2017
dbp:prevTitle
dbr:Asiatisch
dbp:prevYear
2014
dbp:producer
dbr:Fatima_Al_Qadiri
dbp:quote
"[Qadiri] is less a beat maker, more a builder of atmospheric soundscapes, twisting choral harmonies with grime bass lines and doomy dubstep effects. Her conceptual sounds don’t offer blatant, fist pumping anthems for movements like Occupy and Black Lives Matter, instead they seem to capture the still, quiet tension that echoes around that space between the battle lines and point to the psychological fear on both sides."
dbp:released
2016-03-04
dbp:rev
Consequence of Sound Pitchfork dbr:AllMusic Resident Advisor Clash The Guardian Mojo Mixmag Q Now
dbp:rev10score
2.5
dbp:rev2score
8
dbp:rev3score
B
dbp:rev5score
9
dbp:rev8score
7.3
dbp:source
— Kevin Irwin of The Line of Best Fit
dbp:title
Power Blood Moon Battery Fragmentation Blows Aftermath Endzone 10 Curfew Breach Oubliette
dbp:totalLength
2179.0
dbp:type
studio
dbp:width
10.0 165 170
dbo:abstract
Brute is the second studio album of Kuwait musician Fatima Al Qadiri. A protest album inspired by events such as the 2015 Baltimore protests and the Ferguson unrest, the album regards the authoritarian power of law enforcement in the United States and the illusion of democracy existing in the western part of the world. Its cover art by Josh Kline, Babok Radboy, and Joerg Lohse is a photograph of one of the "police teletubbies" found in Kline's art piece "Freedom," which was intended to present how civil rights were being destroyed in the 21st century. Brute features samples of the Ferguson protest, an MSNBC report of Occupy Wall Street by Lawrence O'Donnell, and an interview with a former member of the LAPD regarding the power of the police. Released by Hyperdub in March 2016, Brute garnered significant media coverage for its unique political message and was listed in the "Top Ten Protest Albums Of 2016" by Shadowproof, where Kevin Gosztola described it as "the kind of album that will carry even more resonance in the era of President Donald Trump." However, some critics with more mixed opinions towards the album called it too similar to Qadiri's previous releases and found many of the songs too formless.
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25870
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