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Especially European oi! punk, but post any anti-fascist songs to celebrate good music and the noble cause of ridding the streets of nazi scum!
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I'm the Laird of the land, I'm hot like Pol Pot.'A true white liberal.' - Sword and Shield (on me)
'i am a communism fer a long years.' - twenty percent tip
FKA Mahmoud Ahmerdinnerjacket
SWAG1
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Edit: Lunatic Concept, when you quote a youtube link, you just use the part after v= (ex: C6fGsT_jUK4) instead of the whole link
I think this is crap but it's probably relevant:
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Ska-P, A La Mierda:
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I didn't even know the former coworker who introduced me to Ska-P was political. Ran into him at an antiwar rally one day. Funny how things go.
“We think too small, like the frog at the bottom of the well. He thinks the sky is only as big as the top of the well. If he surfaced, he would have an entirely different view.” - Mao Tse-Tung
| NCPN | Voorwaarts! | WFDY |
From One Big Torrent:
I was recently given permission by the Communist Progressive Labor Party, an anti-revisionist American Communist Party organization, to bundle the tunes they host on their website and put them into a torrent for distribution. I stumbled across all of this while writing a paper on Left wing politics and folk music and think the stuff is really pretty amazing both in terms of historical significance and also just as folk/rock music. I want to learn more about the organization and its history but it has been a somewhat uphill struggle getting regular responses from organizers. The evolution of the Party is also interesting but isn't really documented in the tracks that appear on this release. Their website can be found here: http://www.plp.org.
Anyway, the songs range from classics like L'Internationale (in a couple languages), to 1900s American labor topics and into the 1970s obviously, with tunes like "Clifford Glover" and "Smash the Racist Welfare Bosses." Many songs are classics of other countries, including renditions of "Bella Ciao" and "Usted Me Perdona Don."
The radical nature of the album wasn't lost at least on the Harvard Crimson, which featured a review of the two disc LP in 1972:
"Power to the Working Class is performed and produced by members of the Progressive Labor Party, including a group of welfare mothers from New York that handles most of the vocals. Half of the album is devoted to folk songs, half to rock. The PLP-LP concentrates on a broad evocation of working class solidarity, with only a little emphasis on the PLP itself, although many songs reflect PL's peculiarly arid brand of communism." (http://www.thecrimson.com/article/19...ime-i-turn-on/)
Some of the songs are kitschy, some satirical. Many are moving. Regardless of your politics, this represents an interesting historical document and some of the songs aren't half bad either.
http://onebigtorrent.org/torrents/10...ing-Class-1972
i can't find a downloadable or embedable version, just amazon previews
BUT
woody guthrie- you better get ready
I saw millions of people working.
Not for themselves but for someone else.
I saw millions of people doing.
Not what they themselves want to do.
But what someone else wants them to do.
- One-Eyed God Prophecy
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Does this count as an anti-fascist song?
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R.I.P Juan Almeida Bosque
"The true focus of revolutionary change is never merely
the oppressive situations which we seek to escape,
but that piece of the oppressor which is
planted deep within each of us." Audre Lorde
This is one of my faves.
The fascists are set to march on Cable Street once again this September.
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We claim to live and die equal, the way we were born: we want this real equality or death; that’s what we need.
And we’ll have this real equality, at whatever price. Unhappy will be those who stand between it and us! Unhappy will be those who resist a wish so firmly expressed.
The French Revolution was nothing but a precursor of another revolution, one that will be bigger, more solemn, and which will be the last.
-Gracchus Babeuf