JeezJesus Soundtracked Capitalist Collapse with Electro-Punk Vitriol in Work to Die

The London-based aural antagonist JeezJesus fired all the right shots in his latest single, Work to Die, capturing the malaise slicked across a contemporary society waking up to the grim reality that your labour is nothing more than a means of survival and capital for the elite. It’s an irrefutable recognition of how the dream of a comfortable life, padded with small luxuries to make the grind worthwhile, has drifted so far from reach it might as well be on Mars for younger generations. Soaking the capitalism conversation with nuance while giving an outlet to anyone too exhausted to cage their anger, JeezJesus turned frustration into an essential soundtrack. The single carries the same weight as releases from Bob Vylan, Hyphen, and Kid Kapichi, while carving out its own industrial electro punk identity. It’s a riot of dark, synth-driven rage where the infectious cadence of techno and synth-pop euphoria collides with a confessional warning: grafting harder will never break the cage, exploitation keeps us on our knees no matter how high we strain to rise. As his fourth release of the year, Work to Die extends the big, anthemic synth-pop direction of his earlier work, now cut with sharper alternative […] The post JeezJesus Soundtracked Capitalist Collapse with Electro-Punk Vitriol in Work to Die appeared first on A&R Factory.

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JeezJesus Soundtracked Capitalist Collapse with Electro-Punk Vitriol in Work to Die

The London-based aural antagonist JeezJesus fired all the right shots in his latest single, Work to Die, capturing the malaise slicked across a contemporary society waking up to the grim reality that your labour is nothing more than a means of survival and capital for the elite. It’s an irrefutable recognition of how the dream of a comfortable life, padded with small luxuries to make the grind worthwhile, has drifted so far from reach it might as well be on Mars for younger generations. Soaking the capitalism conversation with nuance while giving an outlet to anyone too exhausted to cage their anger, JeezJesus turned frustration into an essential soundtrack. The single carries the same weight as releases from Bob Vylan, Hyphen, and Kid Kapichi, while carving out its own industrial electro punk identity. It’s a riot of dark, synth-driven rage where the infectious cadence of techno and synth-pop euphoria collides with a confessional warning: grafting harder will never break the cage, exploitation keeps us on our knees no matter how high we strain to rise. As his fourth release of the year, Work to Die extends the big, anthemic synth-pop direction of his earlier work, now cut with sharper alternative […]

The post JeezJesus Soundtracked Capitalist Collapse with Electro-Punk Vitriol in Work to Die appeared first on A&R Factory.

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