To Be Reissued August 17 By Ropeadope // Featuring Bonus Track "Money Talks"
"Antibalas' best album, 2004's Who Is This America?, [is] an album whose fiery, unforgettable title track was pretty much the only song on our post-9/11 protest song CD-R." - Village Voice
Brooklyn, NY -- Antibalas is set to have their modern day afrobeat classic, Who Is This America?, reissued by Ropeadope on  August 17. While it's common for influential recordings  to receive  reissue treatment decades later or around specific anniversaries,  Ropeadope has made the decision to bring back the Brooklyn-based  collective's 2004 album just six years from its initial release for one  primary reason: "The questions and powerful social statements on the  record are as relevant today as they were in 2004. 'Big Man' is a  powerful musical essay on consumerism and the system of continued  oppression that it supports, while the title track is even more poignant  as our nation continues the struggle for its collective identity in the  face of a changing world." 
The third album to be recorded and released by Antibalas through that point in time, Who Is This America? was conceived in post-September 11th New York City. As George Bush  tried (and later succeeded) in holding on to his presidency, Antibalas  was fueling the fires of protest with its powerful musical rhetoric. The  17-piece band simultaneously indicted politicians, ignited a musical  tsunami and turned a new generation of listeners on to afrobeat for the  first time. In a May 2004 review of the seven-track effort, Pitchfork declared: "Who Is This America?,  which in the midst of the current trickle-up afrobeat revival, has  Antibalas bringing a more galvanized and urgent righteous noise than  ever before, and proving they lead the pack when it comes to the  re-imagining and recreating of Fela's archetypal art-form." 
Who Is This America? will be reissued on CD with a previously unreleased track produced by Scott Harding entitled "Money Talks." The iTunes version of the reissue will include the exclusive cut, "Paz." Additionally,  a special limited edition package featuring the CD, the album download  and a reprint of the original Ropeadope "Running Man" t-shirt will be  sold at both Antibalas' and Ropeadope's websites.
Formed in  Brooklyn circa 1998, Antibalas has shared its dynamic afrobeat and funk  sound with 35 countries and over 1000 performances. From humble  beginnings at Brooklyn block parties and community benefits, Antibalas  has since been featured at prestigious festivals including Coachella, Glastonbury, Montreux, Newport Jazz, and at venues from Riker's Island to Carnegie Hall.  Drawing on musical lineages steeped in jazz, funk, Afro‐Caribbean and  West African music, the collective is widely recognized for its mastery  of and innovation in the afrobeat musical form created in the early  1970s by Nigerian composer/activist Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. Members of Antibalas teamed up with the Dap‐Kings to create the grooves for Amy Winehouse's multi‐platinum Back to Black and continue to work with producer Mark Ronson. The horn section is featured prominently on albums by TV On The Radio and Medeski, Martin & Wood, while winning a Grammy Award for their work on Angelique Kidjo's Djin Djin. Most recently, members of the collective were at the heart of the Tony Award-nominated musical FELA! Born from a series of workshops with director/choreographer Bill T. Jones in late 2006, Antibalas' musicians Aaron Johnson (musical director), Jordan McLean (assistant musical director) and Stuart Bogie  helped create what associate producer Questlove called, "the most uncut  funk production ever!" After a triumphant Off‐Broadway run, the show  opened on Broadway in November 2009 at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre.
 

 
 
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