Hey folks, it's my fourth time listening to this album in as many days and I'm looking for recommendations for tracks/albums like it. I'm looking for punk, energetic but also melodic, and packed with righteous anger. Bonus points if it's in a language other than English.

  • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    15 days ago

    Idk that my tastes will fit your specific Rise Against niche (tho I love them) but I can definitely offer the righteous anger.

    Lately I've been listening to A LOT of :

    The Coup

    Dead Prez

    Dead Pioneers - this is probably closest to Rise Against

    Sprinkled with:

    Tom Morello's The Nightwatchman

    Modena City Ramblers

    Rebel Diaz

    Kneecap

    Chumbawumba

    This comment here has a bunch of other bands to check out too. As I mentioned, I'm big fan of Bella Ciao and Which Side Are You On, so if you look for people who do covers of those songs you'll typically find some pretty based, revolutionary stuff. https://hexbear.net/comment/5592490

    • 21Gramsci [he/him]
      hexagon
      ·
      15 days ago

      Holy shit I was NOT expecting to find the Modena City Ramblers in this thread, but having grown up on them it's such a heartwarming surprise. <3

      I know some of the other names and I'll go through the rest when I have the time. Thanks!

      • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]
        ·
        15 days ago

        Lol, they were one of my Bella Ciao finds! stalin-approval

        Welcome! Hope you find something that interests you!

        One last addition I just remembered. I've not looked into these folks yet but they're a Burmese punk group I found a while ago. Might be up your alley. The Rebel Riot and Cacerolazo.

        https://youtu.be/Ddm5yNcuHPg

        • 21Gramsci [he/him]
          hexagon
          ·
          12 days ago

          I have so much love for that Burmese Bella Ciao cover... I think I actually heard it first a while ago after the It Could Happen Here podcast series on Myanmar sent me down a bunch of rabbit holes. It has the energy and cultural context that this song actually should have, fuck all the Netflix TV show co-opted EDM remixes that people know Bella Ciao for these days. Thanks for bringing this specific memory back.

          heart-sickle

          • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]
            ·
            12 days ago

            fuck all the Netflix TV show co-opted EDM remixes that people know Bella Ciao for these days.

            LMAO, while I totally get what you mean, I'm actually a big fan of them. data-laughing I subscribe to an idea others here have dubbed Treat Entryism, in that I think trying to engage people at an intellectual level with an idea that bucks the cultural hegemony they're immersed in 24/7 is a losing battle. So, I find leftist /radical slop (including music 💁) that I can use to introduce brain de-wormers. Money Heist is one the best imo, especially Bella Ciao, as that lets me talk about one of my favorite historical figures, Lucio Urtubia. anarkitty

            • 21Gramsci [he/him]
              hexagon
              ·
              11 days ago

              Ok to be fair the story of Lucio rocks, thanks for sharing that. I didn't know that was the inspiration for Money Heist.

              I would usually agree with you about the Treat Entryism. I'm not an ideological purist and I actually like "cultural remixes" in a general sense: pieces of media that reuse and recontextualise older cultural artifacts in a modern form. Bella Ciao though is the one cultural product I become conservative about, in my head it has too much significance to hear it taken out of context without cringing.

              • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]
                ·
                11 days ago

                I very much recommend pulling the thread on Lucio , it's fascinating stuff. My man was funding a significant chunk of leftist operations across the globe for like two decades or something. stalin-heart

                As far as Money Heist goes, (for obvious reasons) I love heist stuff anyway, but Season 1 had a much more revolutionary edge to it that was blunted after Netflix got a hold of the show, unfortunately. The main mastermind of the heist had an anarchist bank robber father, iirc, which gives the first season a whole vibe of anti-establishment, 'is the government even legitimate?' type thought to it. Unrelated to the story of the show itself, Netflix has a documentary called Money Heist, The Phenomenon. Which, if you're into Cultural Hegemony, 21Gramsci, you'll probably find it interesting. It goes into the impact of the show across the globe, why they felt it resonated so well, and how it was literally inspiring bank robberies. IMO, every Leftist should be checking it out along with the Lucio doc.

                Lol, I get ya. We all have things we want to protect. rat-salute

                • 21Gramsci [he/him]
                  hexagon
                  ·
                  11 days ago

                  Resetting the "days since being told to read theory" counter back to 0 once again... eviscerated

                  Jk, I read your old thread on Lucio that you linked, was that the one you're referring to or is there another? And if you have other resources on it beside the ones in the thread please do share!

                  About Money Heist, oof. I only watched the first season and a while ago too. I remember being kinda unimpressed because I felt like a lot of the plot conceits were pretty directly lifted from Inside Man, one of my favorite movies. The political content seemed pretty surface level to me back then, at least that's what I remember, but I might have missed stuff. Definitely interested in the documentary about it's impact though, that stuff is right up my alley as you can tell. gramsci-heh

                  • JoeByeThen [he/him, they/them]
                    ·
                    11 days ago

                    Resetting the "days since being told to read theory" counter back to 0 once again...

                    data-laughing more like history! There's that 2007 Lucio documentary at the bottom of my thread that's really good, and honestly just reading into stuff the CNT was doing to fight against Franco is enlightening. I don't have anything specific to recommend in that regard, but every time I run across Francisco Sabate's name, it's something amazing. Dude had a robin hood like reputation.

                    Well, now I need to watch Inside Man! Like I said, I'm into this sort of stuff, so it's possible I was reading more into it than they meant, but there's a definite drop off in revolutionary aspect in the final seasons.

                    spoiler

                    They kinda flat out disavow The Professor's revolutionary tendency and have him declare he's just doing it to fulfill his inner thief or something at the end.

                    btw, do you have any specific books to recommend on gramsci? I bought the first vol of buttigieg's Prison Notebooks translation, and uh it was too over my head, I didn't even know where to begin with it.