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  1. With full-on heavy-hitting sound, this might seem to forecast a brutal listen, but on their second outing, Kyosaku, the band drills deep into detail, the buoyant music gradually shifting while maintaining its ferocity, in a way inviting comparison with Kommun, another group with Loxbo and Packard (also Lisa Ullén and Vilhelm Bromander) in ...

    • Forced Exposure

      "We Don't Owe" points to bigger bodies inflicting harm on...

  2. www.forcedexposure.com › HomeForced Exposure

    "We Don't Owe" points to bigger bodies inflicting harm on populations that people owe nothing to. "Breaking Points" harkens the times that listeners may lose focus while pushing to transcend melancholy. "Eviction" is about being pushed out of a space unwillingly while simultaneously being forced to move forward.

  3. This powerful exhibition, Brutal Exposure: the Congo, currently on show at the International Slavery Museum and developed in partnership with Autograph ABP and Anti-Slavery International, documents the violent exploitation of Congolese people and national resources at the hands of King Leopold II of Belgium in the late nineteenth and early ...

  4. beta.forcedexposure.com › HomeForced Exposure

    From their nascent high school socialist-realist post-punk band Mayfirst, to teenage scavenger trips to the Princeton Record Exchange and City Gardens, the two came of age goofing along to the Dead Kennedys, the Butthole Surfers, and Sonic Youth in the dank Jersey/Philly-scene music holes.

  5. This haunting exhibition presented what was probably the first photographic campaign in support of human rights. It documented the exploitation and brutality experienced by Congolese people under the control of Leopold II of Belgium in the 1900s. Please note: Brutal Exposure contains content that some visitors may find distressing.

  6. Vol.2. A selection of 28 Colombian cumbia bangers for the dance floor from the deep vaults of Codiscos and associated labels Costeño, Zeida and Famoso, all of them originally released between 1962 and 1983.

  7. We Release Jazz (WRWTFWW Records' new sister-label) present the official reissue of criminally overlooked Japanese jazz gem Mellow Dream by Hokkaido pianist wunderkind Ryo Fukui, originally released in 1977. Released in conjunction with the its legendary predecessor 1976's Scenery (WRJ 001CD/LP/LTD-LP).