New Music on 2SER 09/11/20

Image by: Michelle Grace Hunder 

Welcome to the new music review where we connect you with some of the best new music spinning on Breakfast, The Daily and Drive programs.

ALBUMS:

Caitlin Harnett & The Pony Boys – Late Night Essentials (FEATURE ALBUM)

Black Rock Band – Identity
Blake Scott – Niscitam
Common – A Beautiful Revolution (Pt 1)
Emma Donovan & The Putbacks – Crossover
Helena Deland – Someone New
Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings – Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Rendition Was In)
Songhoy Blues – Optimisme

SINGLES:

Babitha – Get Away
CLYPSO – Storm
Kacy & Clayton and Marlon Williams – Isn’t It
King Stingray – Hey Wanhaka
The Slingers – The Cruellest Cut
Time For Dreams – New Conflict Dream

Sydney singer-songwriter Emma Donovan’s latest album, Crossover, feels like a direct continuation of the David Dungay Jr. protests in Australian cities just a few months ago. “We want justice for all, for all them lives” she sings on ‘Mob March’, a passionate and moving description of the power of peaceful protest and the injustice Indigenous Australians still face in this country. A retro soul record that evokes the work of Sharon Jones and Nina Simone, Crossover is an impactful Black Lives Matter statement, carried by Donovan’s soaring voice.

Never mind the smoothness of his voice or the laid-back feel of the production, Common’s latest album, A Beautiful Revolution (Part 1), is a fiery and political rap record. Working again with jazz drummer Karriem Riggins after 2016’s Black America Again and 2019’s Let Love, the Chicago rapper synthesises thoughts about slavery, Black Lives Matters, and hip-hop for a poetic examination of American history – and released just in time for the US election.

DATE POSTED
Monday 9th of November, 2020
CATEGORY

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