2 X 12" Black limited edition of 300 copies.
Includes sticker and download code.
Includes unlimited streaming of Dancing as an act of rebellion
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
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2 x Black&Yellow Smoked 180gr. vinyl LP
Record/Vinyl + Digital Album
2 X 12" Yellow smoked vinyl Limited edition of 100 copies. (Only 50 available on only vinyl, other 50 will be on the special box.)
* Please take note that each one is different and may differ of mockup view.
Includes album sticker and download code.
Includes unlimited streaming of Dancing as an act of rebellion
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
Sold Out
Molotov pack
Record/Vinyl + Digital Album
2 x Black&Yellow splattered 180gr. vinyl LP + cover printed in sandpaper + reused Coke-Pepsi black glass bottle + bandana + matches + petrol dispenser
Includes unlimited streaming of Dancing as an act of rebellion
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
Sold Out
Streaming + Download
Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
It was the first Abraxas Project song, a simple, clear and forceful anti-capitalist message, based on famous quotes by so diverse personalities as Albert Einstein, Michael Moore or Henry Rollins from Black Flag, covered up among a tangle of electronic sounds, techno, darkwave, EBM and industrial music, with the aim of fulfilling the strange and challenging goal of making a large mass of public dance and later make them think about the messages that have consciously or unconsciously absorbed during the very human, trivial and necessary exercise of dancing in society. In the video, directed by Juan Carlos Cembreros (ScreenWarriors) and starring the model Miranda Díez, the degradation of the Western individual to which capitalism itself submits with its subtle mechanisms that we all embrace with supposed happiness is represented in a hyper-explicit way, capturing this concept in a young and beautiful woman who ends up totally shattered and unhinged because in our society the youngest are the most susceptible to capitalist trickery and women in particular, the most disadvantaged in a still unbalanced balance between genders at all levels and, in addition to this, in a sad 21st century in which we are witnessing the tyranny of beauty and the hyper-sexualization of girls. Embrace capitalism, allow the exploitation of yourself and others. Watch your own suicide.
lyrics
LYRICS
Capitalism has brought with it progress, not merely in production but also in knowledge.
Be capitalist. Believe in capitalism. Love capitalism.
Be capitalist, my friend. Believe in capitalism, my sister. Love capitalism, my brother. Become capitalist, comrade!
It rewards us for being brave, it awards us for being innovative and thinking out of the box. Thinking out of the fucking box.
Embrace capitalism. Embrace capitalism!
However
Capitalism means that a few people will do very well, and the rest will serve the few.
Capitalism attacks and destroys all the finer sentiments of the human heart; it ruthlessly sweeps away old traditions and ideas opposed to its progress, and it exploits and corrupts those things once held sacred.
Capitalism offers freedom, but far from freedom, it enslaves us.
Enslaves you, enslaves us. Enslaves you, enslaves us. Enslaves you, enslaves us.
Enslaves you!
Enslaves us!
Enslaves you!
Embrace capitalism! Embrace the one who strangles you! Love the one who kills you! Fuck the one who kills you!
Hey guys, nothing in the world is irreversible, not even capitalism.
Music by Abraxas.
Music production by Abraxas and José Rodríguez.
Recorded at Abraxas home studio, Estudio Antimateria/Moog24 and Estudis14.
Mixed by Abraxas and Cato14 at Estudis14.
Lyrics based on quotes by Albert Einstein, Thomas Friedman, Henry Rollins, Michael Moore, Daniel De Leon, Ian Mckellen and Fidel Castro.
Main voice by Lesia Benett. Second voice by Abraxas.
Model/actress in cover: Miranda Díez.
supported by 4 fans who also own “B1. Embrace capitalism (until it strangles you)”
A worthy successor to Your Dystopia, My Utopia.
The title track is a chewy, distorted, fucked up love letter to 2020. The final track a re-imagining of the now 30 year old FLA's Digital Tension Dementia.
Discordia
Darkwave synth that directly addresses our modern dystopian political environment, with proceeds going to the Voting Rights Project. Bandcamp New & Notable Oct 17, 2018
The solo project of Philip Quinn (Girls Names), this is dark-edged electronic work with a needle-sharp take on life in the U.K. Bandcamp New & Notable Sep 10, 2019