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"Radio Retaliation is definitely a more overt political statement," says Rob Garza of Thievery Corporation.
"There’s no excuse for not speaking out at this point, with the suspension of habeas corpus, outsourced torture,
illegal wars of aggression, fuel, food, and economic crises. It’s hard to close your eyes and sleep while the world is
burning around you. If you are an artist, this is the most essential time to speak up.” So that’s exactly what they do
with their new album.
Recording in their Washington DC based studio, Rob Garza and Eric Hilton, better known as the international
DJ and production duo Thievery Corporation, have managed to blossom in the heart of a city they often refer to as
“Babylon;” a poignant reference to the traditional Rastafarian distaste and distrust of a corrupt and unjust
modern system. Although the city is best known as the seat of an aggressive American Empire, paradoxically
Washington DC has long been the home of a music subculture legendary for fierce independence, a staunch
do-it-yourself work ethic, and conscientious social activism exemplified by genre-defining pioneers like
godfather of go-go Chuck Brown and indie punk rockers Bad Brains, Minor Threat and Fugazi.
Likewise, although some may lazily pin Thievery Corporation as the soundtrack to their cocktail
infused late night soiree, the duo have always drawn deep from the well of independent and confrontational
music subculture their home town is known for, to produce an ever expanding globally conscious catalogue of
music that is difficult to classify. Starting in 1996 with two international underground hit vinyl singles
"Shaolin Satellite" and "2001 Spliff Odyssey," released on their own indie record label ESL Music, Garza and
Hilton soon released Sounds from The Thievery Hi-Fi; an album that defined a genre and crystallized their
distinct "outernational sound" aesthetic. Over the next decade the duo would remix the likes of David Byrne,
The Doors, and Sarah McLachlan, and record three more critically acclaimed albums of original material, each
one transcending the last in scope, style, and message: The Mirror Conspiracy (2000), The Richest Man in
Babylon (2002), and The Cosmic Game (2005).
Now Thievery Corporation gear up to release their incendiary fifth independent studio album, Radio Retaliation,
in September 2008. Radio Retaliation finds inspiration in the uncompromising political music of groups like the
Clash, Public Enemy, and Fela Kuti and is without a doubt Thievery Corporation’s broadest and most progressive
album yet. The album imparts tough socio-political messages largely absent from today’s popular music.
"Apart from a few independent bastions, there is no musical or informational freedom on the US airwaves anymore.
They’ve been bought up, consolidated and homogenized. Music is suffering and society is suffering too. Radio
Retaliation is about an exodus of conscious people who are willing to acknowledge something is wrong with the
‘official version’ in news and culture," explains Hilton. "The album cover image is that of a Mexican Zapatista
fighter. They wear masks to shield their identity from right-wing death squads who prey on them and terrorize them,
threatening to kick them off their land or worse. People’s movements, like the Zapatistas, are a great source of
inspiration for us and that’s clearly reflected on the new record."
"This record is also our most internationally oriented,"” adds Garza, describing how Radio Retaliation touches upon
the eclectic sounds of Jamaica, Latin America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. "We worked with artists from
around the world. The roots of our inspiration have always come from what is happening globally, and at the
moment there is so much happening, on every level."
With Radio Retaliation Thievery Corporation raise the bar with a new cast of musical collaborators including
Nigeria’s afro-beat heir Femi Kuti, Brazilian star vocalist and guitarist Seu Jorge, Indian sitar virtuoso Anushka
Shankar, Slovakian chanteuse and violinist Jana Andevska, and Washington DC’s own go-go originator Chuck Brown.
Also returning are long time microphone co-conspirators Sleepy Wonder, Lou Lou, Notch, Zee, and Verny Varela.
A defining element of Thievery Corporation’s sound has always been its decidedly organic quality and this is clearly
evident in the rich productions of Radio Retaliation and recent live tour dates. Despite their minimal beginnings,
Garza and Hilton have adopted a growing cast of collaborators over the years, vital musicians and vocalists who
contribute to a dynamic 15 member live band. Playing sold out venues and festivals worldwide, Thievery Corporation
dazzle thousands of music fans every year with their kaleidoscopic live show.
With the help of long time partners, the UN World Food Programme, Thievery Corporation also aim to provoke conscientious
thought among their audience. Garza explains, "We definitely want to contribute to the opening of ears, eyes,
and minds. With our live shows it’s a poignant example of music and culture mixing together in an explosive vibrant
way. To see a Persian singer singing in Farsi, as America debates on a war with Iran, next to other band members
from all corners of the earth singing in Spanish, Portuguese, French and so on, it makes people wonder . . . and
if you can get people to question the things around them, just a little, then that’s not such a bad thing."
Radio Retaliation hits the streets on ESL Music, September 23, 2008.
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