
Brut Thoughts
Win tickets to see Murkage Dave
To Enter: Pre-order a copy of Brut Thoughts or enter your details HERE.
Competition closes at Midday GMT on Thursday 12th March. Good luck!
One of the UKâs most singular voices, Murkage Dave has spent the last decade crafting a body of work that refuses to fit neatly into any genre box. His music, loosely pop but informed by indie, outsider art, and an instinct for storytelling, is built on honesty, empathy, and fearless social commentary.Â
With his latest album Brut Thoughts, Dave connects the inner turbulence of modern life with the fractured world around him, reflecting on internet culture, overstimulation, immigrant experience, political extremism and the power of community. The album channels present day anger and disillusionment while refusing to lose sight of hope. âItâs millennial meme culture music,â he explains. âThe cacophony of whatâs going on in my head spiling out into song. Living in the shadow of 80s Thatcherite/Reaganite economic policy, the broken social contract, the unkept promise of a life we were supposed to get if we did our bit.â
A cathartic soundtrack for life in late capitalism, the album draws inspiration from Talking Heads, Sampha, The Smiths, and The Streets. It came together in an unorthodox, nomadic way, across living rooms and borrowed studios in London, Manchester, Berlin, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, and the Danish countryside. âLike most musicians in London I canât afford a studio,â says Dave. âSo I put a ca l out to see whoâd let me crash and write. I ended up in right-wing and left-wing parts of the country - Bristol, Margate, Cardiff, Leicester, Manchester, and the Reform stronghold of Ashfield.â
The recordâs collaborative spirit is central to its DNA, featuring contributions from James from Yard Act, Kayus from Young Fathers, Elery from WU LYF, and Lauren Auder. Touring with Yard Act in 2024 also served as a creative catalyst. âA l the music being played on the tour bus opened up avenues for me,â says Dave. âIt inspired me to start my radio show The Outlet on Refuge Worldwide, and al of this bled into the music.â Beyond his songwriting, Dave continues to shape UK culture through curation - from Manchesterâs Murkage Club to Tonga, the touring party co-founded with Mike Skinner, and his ongoing radio work.
Standout track âGeneration Left On Readâ captures millennial disillusionment and the numbing effects of irony-as-coping-mechanism. With an affecting contribution from James Smith of Yard Act - his first under new solo moniker Konopinsky - the track crystalises the albumâs exploration of lost promises and the determination to sti l care in a world that encourages detachment.
Meanwhile, âSwordfight In A Chicken Shopâ serves as a chaotic centrepiece, a vivid depiction of information overload produced by Tim London and featuring Kayus Bankole, Elery James Roberts, Lauren Auder and Bournemouth Hope Youth Choir. In contrast, âRNAâ is one of the recordâs most intimate moments. An unguarded meditation on masculinity, grief and spiritual ambivalence, coproduced by Kiddus with backing vocals from Young Fathers. For Dave, the record is also a reckoning with his past. âIâve come to the realisation lately that the church my family attended during the early portion of my life was a cult,â he shares. âIt was in the church that I first witnessed abuse of power and physical abuse, and where the idea that white Europeans were superior to other races was first introduced to me.â These experiences shaped his mistrust of institutions, echoing throughout Brut Thoughts, a record that dissects narcissism, personal, political, and digital, and questions how compassion is being eroded in the algorithm age. The title Brut Thoughts draws from Jean Dubuffetâs Art Brut movement - an embrace of outsider art and raw, untrained creativity. âBrutâ also means both ârawâ in French and âunsweetenedâ in English, reflecting the albumâs spirit of unfiltered honesty. The title references the classic Brut fragrance too, tied to the working-class masculinity of his grandadâs and dadâs generation. âIn a way,â Dave says, âthis album is a l the things my dad would have said if he wasnât hemmed in by the socioeconomic factors of the 80s, being chased by the National Front and being a parent.â Made during the period of his fatherâs passing in early 2024, the record holds onto a quiet belief that things can change - a thread of hope running beneath its heaviness.
Original: $25.33
-70%$25.33
$7.60Brut Thoughts
Win tickets to see Murkage Dave
To Enter: Pre-order a copy of Brut Thoughts or enter your details HERE.
Competition closes at Midday GMT on Thursday 12th March. Good luck!
One of the UKâs most singular voices, Murkage Dave has spent the last decade crafting a body of work that refuses to fit neatly into any genre box. His music, loosely pop but informed by indie, outsider art, and an instinct for storytelling, is built on honesty, empathy, and fearless social commentary.Â
With his latest album Brut Thoughts, Dave connects the inner turbulence of modern life with the fractured world around him, reflecting on internet culture, overstimulation, immigrant experience, political extremism and the power of community. The album channels present day anger and disillusionment while refusing to lose sight of hope. âItâs millennial meme culture music,â he explains. âThe cacophony of whatâs going on in my head spiling out into song. Living in the shadow of 80s Thatcherite/Reaganite economic policy, the broken social contract, the unkept promise of a life we were supposed to get if we did our bit.â
A cathartic soundtrack for life in late capitalism, the album draws inspiration from Talking Heads, Sampha, The Smiths, and The Streets. It came together in an unorthodox, nomadic way, across living rooms and borrowed studios in London, Manchester, Berlin, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, and the Danish countryside. âLike most musicians in London I canât afford a studio,â says Dave. âSo I put a ca l out to see whoâd let me crash and write. I ended up in right-wing and left-wing parts of the country - Bristol, Margate, Cardiff, Leicester, Manchester, and the Reform stronghold of Ashfield.â
The recordâs collaborative spirit is central to its DNA, featuring contributions from James from Yard Act, Kayus from Young Fathers, Elery from WU LYF, and Lauren Auder. Touring with Yard Act in 2024 also served as a creative catalyst. âA l the music being played on the tour bus opened up avenues for me,â says Dave. âIt inspired me to start my radio show The Outlet on Refuge Worldwide, and al of this bled into the music.â Beyond his songwriting, Dave continues to shape UK culture through curation - from Manchesterâs Murkage Club to Tonga, the touring party co-founded with Mike Skinner, and his ongoing radio work.
Standout track âGeneration Left On Readâ captures millennial disillusionment and the numbing effects of irony-as-coping-mechanism. With an affecting contribution from James Smith of Yard Act - his first under new solo moniker Konopinsky - the track crystalises the albumâs exploration of lost promises and the determination to sti l care in a world that encourages detachment.
Meanwhile, âSwordfight In A Chicken Shopâ serves as a chaotic centrepiece, a vivid depiction of information overload produced by Tim London and featuring Kayus Bankole, Elery James Roberts, Lauren Auder and Bournemouth Hope Youth Choir. In contrast, âRNAâ is one of the recordâs most intimate moments. An unguarded meditation on masculinity, grief and spiritual ambivalence, coproduced by Kiddus with backing vocals from Young Fathers. For Dave, the record is also a reckoning with his past. âIâve come to the realisation lately that the church my family attended during the early portion of my life was a cult,â he shares. âIt was in the church that I first witnessed abuse of power and physical abuse, and where the idea that white Europeans were superior to other races was first introduced to me.â These experiences shaped his mistrust of institutions, echoing throughout Brut Thoughts, a record that dissects narcissism, personal, political, and digital, and questions how compassion is being eroded in the algorithm age. The title Brut Thoughts draws from Jean Dubuffetâs Art Brut movement - an embrace of outsider art and raw, untrained creativity. âBrutâ also means both ârawâ in French and âunsweetenedâ in English, reflecting the albumâs spirit of unfiltered honesty. The title references the classic Brut fragrance too, tied to the working-class masculinity of his grandadâs and dadâs generation. âIn a way,â Dave says, âthis album is a l the things my dad would have said if he wasnât hemmed in by the socioeconomic factors of the 80s, being chased by the National Front and being a parent.â Made during the period of his fatherâs passing in early 2024, the record holds onto a quiet belief that things can change - a thread of hope running beneath its heaviness.
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Win tickets to see Murkage Dave
To Enter: Pre-order a copy of Brut Thoughts or enter your details HERE.
Competition closes at Midday GMT on Thursday 12th March. Good luck!
One of the UKâs most singular voices, Murkage Dave has spent the last decade crafting a body of work that refuses to fit neatly into any genre box. His music, loosely pop but informed by indie, outsider art, and an instinct for storytelling, is built on honesty, empathy, and fearless social commentary.Â
With his latest album Brut Thoughts, Dave connects the inner turbulence of modern life with the fractured world around him, reflecting on internet culture, overstimulation, immigrant experience, political extremism and the power of community. The album channels present day anger and disillusionment while refusing to lose sight of hope. âItâs millennial meme culture music,â he explains. âThe cacophony of whatâs going on in my head spiling out into song. Living in the shadow of 80s Thatcherite/Reaganite economic policy, the broken social contract, the unkept promise of a life we were supposed to get if we did our bit.â
A cathartic soundtrack for life in late capitalism, the album draws inspiration from Talking Heads, Sampha, The Smiths, and The Streets. It came together in an unorthodox, nomadic way, across living rooms and borrowed studios in London, Manchester, Berlin, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, and the Danish countryside. âLike most musicians in London I canât afford a studio,â says Dave. âSo I put a ca l out to see whoâd let me crash and write. I ended up in right-wing and left-wing parts of the country - Bristol, Margate, Cardiff, Leicester, Manchester, and the Reform stronghold of Ashfield.â
The recordâs collaborative spirit is central to its DNA, featuring contributions from James from Yard Act, Kayus from Young Fathers, Elery from WU LYF, and Lauren Auder. Touring with Yard Act in 2024 also served as a creative catalyst. âA l the music being played on the tour bus opened up avenues for me,â says Dave. âIt inspired me to start my radio show The Outlet on Refuge Worldwide, and al of this bled into the music.â Beyond his songwriting, Dave continues to shape UK culture through curation - from Manchesterâs Murkage Club to Tonga, the touring party co-founded with Mike Skinner, and his ongoing radio work.
Standout track âGeneration Left On Readâ captures millennial disillusionment and the numbing effects of irony-as-coping-mechanism. With an affecting contribution from James Smith of Yard Act - his first under new solo moniker Konopinsky - the track crystalises the albumâs exploration of lost promises and the determination to sti l care in a world that encourages detachment.
Meanwhile, âSwordfight In A Chicken Shopâ serves as a chaotic centrepiece, a vivid depiction of information overload produced by Tim London and featuring Kayus Bankole, Elery James Roberts, Lauren Auder and Bournemouth Hope Youth Choir. In contrast, âRNAâ is one of the recordâs most intimate moments. An unguarded meditation on masculinity, grief and spiritual ambivalence, coproduced by Kiddus with backing vocals from Young Fathers. For Dave, the record is also a reckoning with his past. âIâve come to the realisation lately that the church my family attended during the early portion of my life was a cult,â he shares. âIt was in the church that I first witnessed abuse of power and physical abuse, and where the idea that white Europeans were superior to other races was first introduced to me.â These experiences shaped his mistrust of institutions, echoing throughout Brut Thoughts, a record that dissects narcissism, personal, political, and digital, and questions how compassion is being eroded in the algorithm age. The title Brut Thoughts draws from Jean Dubuffetâs Art Brut movement - an embrace of outsider art and raw, untrained creativity. âBrutâ also means both ârawâ in French and âunsweetenedâ in English, reflecting the albumâs spirit of unfiltered honesty. The title references the classic Brut fragrance too, tied to the working-class masculinity of his grandadâs and dadâs generation. âIn a way,â Dave says, âthis album is a l the things my dad would have said if he wasnât hemmed in by the socioeconomic factors of the 80s, being chased by the National Front and being a parent.â Made during the period of his fatherâs passing in early 2024, the record holds onto a quiet belief that things can change - a thread of hope running beneath its heaviness.











