All posts by Shouts - Music from the Rooftops!

Shouts - Music from the Rooftops! is a media project that finds and shares protest music from around the world by artists who take their voices seriously and use their talents responsibly.

“The Violator Is You”: Women In Chile Perform A Protest Chant

Protests in Chile are ongoing and one part of it is women voicing their frustration for the lack of action taken by the government when it comes to femicide and sentencing violators of women.

A large group of women protested the government’s failure to protect them with a chant and dance. According to this article “The song was created by Chilean feminist collective ‘Lastesis’ and is based on Argentinian theorist Rita Segato’s work that argues sexual violence is a political problem.”

See also: Nueva Canción protest music sung during Chile protests (videos)

“The patriarchy is a judge
that judges us for being born
and our punishment
is femicide
impunity for my killer
is the disappearance
is the violation

the fault was not mine, not where I was, nor what I was wearing

the violator was you
the violator is you

they’re the cops
they’re the judges
the state
the president

the violator was you
the violator is you

the oppressive state is a masculine violator

sleep gently, innocent girl
don’t worry about the thieves
who for your sweet dreams
come as friends who look like cops

the violator was you
the violator is you”

New Compilation Album Supporting Victims Of Chilean Oppression

‘Aquí nos están matando’ translates to ‘here they are killing us’ which is the title of a new compilation album from a Chilean record label, imperecedero.

During mass protests and city lockdowns protesters in Chile have been singing on the streets and from the balconies. Now musicians from all over the world have come together to raise awareness of the oppression taking place in Chile and raising money in support of the people hurt in the process.

Hugh Masekelas’s Protest Concert ‘Live In Lesotho’ From 1980 Being Re-Released

In 1980 South African trumpeter and social activist Hugh Masekela played a live concert in Lesotho, a country landlocked by his then oppressive home country.

Masekela traveled around the African continent during his career as well as the world. He played with Fela Kuti and Paul Simon. He set up a mobile recording studio in Botswana near the SA border to record Botswana artists.

Masekela released 44 studio albums and his last was called ‘No Borders’ (2016). On the cover it depicted a map of Africa from 1590, a vision of the continent before colonial powers put down divisive lines.

His impact is long lasting and now the 1980 concert in Lesotho is being re-released on vinyl by UK’s Matsuli Music.