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Seize the Time

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Download links and information about Seize the Time by Flattbush. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Rock, Punk, Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 36:03 minutes.

Artist: Flattbush
Release date: 2006
Genre: Rock, Punk, Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 15
Duration: 36:03
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Serve the People 1:57
2. Jorge 1:50
3. Lupa 1:59
4. Seize the Time 2:09
5. All Power to the People 1:36
6. Welga 2:37
7. Community Organizer 3:03
8. Prison and Beyond 2:07
9. Passion of Satan 2:11
10. Hamlet 1:37
11. Fascist Diktador 2:14
12. AK47 for Self Defense 1:29
13. Baket 2:09
14. Red Light District II 1:59
15. Song of Hope 7:06

Details

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Considering the many Filipino immigrants residing in the States, and the U.S.' long relationship with the islands, most Americans remain surprisingly ignorant about this former U.S. possession. Imelda Marcos and her shoes seem to have left the most long-lasting impression, while the U.S. overthrow of the country's 1898 Republican government and the subsequent bloody suppression of the Nationalist insurrection that spilt forth in its wake remains buried in the past. The fact that the U.S. have troops on the ground assisting the increasingly unpopular President Gloria Arroyo fight her myriad enemies (including Muslim nationalists, free-booting kidnap-happy, pseudo-Muslim extremists, rebellious army units, left-wing activists, union leaders, and a variety of other political opponents), also seems to have passed by most Americans. The country's economy struggles, with households dependent on remittances from family members working abroad.

No wonder Flatbush are pissed off. Led by the emigré Maniago brothers, the band vent their rage at the states of both their native land and their adopted home. From the howl of fury directed at the "Fascist Diktador" (drawing a straight line between Hitler's and Bush's policies), to the tale of torture that weaves through the screams of torment in "The Passion of Satan," Seize the Time! bursts with vitriol from the grooves. But the band aren't merely railing against the forces of darkness, they're determined to fight back. Grabbing an "AK-47 for Self Defense," the group intend to "Serve the People" by rallying them to the barricades and frontlines, and finally overthrow the "reactionaries" and "imperial pigs" responsible for their misery, finally handing "All Power to the People." No political polemics nor nuanced economic dissertations here, what Flatbush offer is explosive revolution, driven by centuries of violent oppression and ruthless exploitation; the match to light the long simmering fuse. Their music, as incendiary as their lyrics, whirls with fury, fire, and barely controlled chaos. This is the sound of the Parisian masses storming the Bastilles, the Russian mobs slaughtering the nobility, and every starving peasant who picked up a hoe and smashed it into the head of his greedy landowner. Not for the faint of heart nor the armchair radical, Flatbush use their music as a weapon, bashing down the old order with an aural assault of nuclear proportions.