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Re-release of the highly sought-after album ‘Resistance’ by the seminal Yugoslavian electronic rock band Borghesia, originally released in 1989 on Play It Again Sam/PIAS (Europe), Wax Trax (USA) and Jugoton (former Yugoslavia).
The carefully remastered album includes an exclusive bonus live album ‘Dal Vivo A El Paso’, recorded in December 1988 at their gig in Torino (Italy) during one of their European tours. The recording features very different, raw and at times ‘dubbed up’ versions of their early tracks such as ‘Naked, Uniformed, Dead’, Am I? and Him (On). The historical perfectly captures the atmosphere and energy of their live appearances at the time.
Borghesia (Italian for ‘bourgeoisie’), who were formed in Ljubljana (Slovenia) in 1982, had always considered its art to be far broader than just sonic. Borghesia’s transgressive, transdisciplinary alloy of film expression, distinctively physical performative practices, usage of new technology and conveniently abrasive EBM (electronic body music) musical production hasn’t only been ground-breaking in terms of the holistic, visual/sonic presence of an art collective, but had a rather decisive influence on the general aesthetics of the immensely important Yugoslav subcultural landscape of the 1980s. Borghesia was one of the first bands from the East of the Iron Curtain who used the VHS video medium to distribute their art and was also one of few projects from socialist Yugoslavia to successfully penetrate the curtain itself, reaching international audiences.
In line with Borghesia’s unique social engagement, progressiveness and political criticism, Resistance is one of their most powerful statements. It's the ultimate fight the power manifesto, which makes punk and hip-hop albums of the time sound like children's songs. Released during the last stages of socialist Yugoslavia, and in the last sighs of the original Borghesia line-up, the album's sole sonic character anticipated the oncoming atrocities of the civil wars in the region.
This is not music for nodding your head to; it's tactical broadcast for the nocturnal resistance to this very day. Borghesia didn’t address control only - they sampled the political top, the secret police and explicitly connected authority with dominance. They offer the tendency for liberation as the only appropriate exit. The production of the album isn’t clean or polished. On the contrary - Resistance sounds like it was created in a bunker, using stolen military equipment and synthesisers. Borghesia’s genius lies in their understanding that the relentless, mechanical EBM beat was the sound of the State - and by hijacking it, turning the system’s own rhythm against itself they created the most powerful form of sonic insurgency.

