Motihari Brigade Threatens New Album

Motihari Brigade Threatens New Album

Motihari Brigade Threatens New Album
“And when the band plays ‘Hail To The Chief’, They point the cannon at you.” 

Just in case the world’s descent into an uncontrolled downward spiral of chaos has not been enough, the band Motihari Brigade now threaten to release a new album in 2026.  Expert insiders predict that the album is likely to further destabilize an already tense situation.  

The new album will explore themes of mass propaganda, censorship, artificial intelligence, and militarism – add people familiar with the matter.  Others say it will be about dancing TikTok girls and technology addiction. An already traumatized and indifferent world awaits the new release, and whatever it portends. 

Creative Destruction Records, the band’s label, assures listeners that the new album was painstakingly crafted by real flesh and blood human musicians using genuine internal organs. 

An early review by ChatGPT, who somehow had pre-release access to the album, commented, “I never could have come up with this album in a million prompts. But now that it’s out there in my training data – Yoink!”

Also reached for comment, Elon Musk called it “…an encouraging cultural statement for listeners who crave the illusion that resistance is still possible.”

Fans of Motihari Brigade’s previous albums have noticed that the band strangely seems to manifest reality in prophetic and dangerous ways.  “If that’s true” observed Eric Winston, the band’s singer-songwriter-guitarist, “Then we are really in for it this time.” 

The new album revives the “Mini-Rock Opera” concept, with a connected suite of songs that explore the disastrous repeated cycle of the incessant drive towards war and it’s damaging aftermath.  

As a playful teaser from the new album, Motihari Brigade have released a single of the only cover song on the album, an explosive version of the Creedence Clearwater Revival classic “Fortunate Son” – just in case anyone missed the earlier point about runaway militarism.

Listen to “Fortunate Son” HERE, and in case there is a future also pre-save the impending album HERE. 

Motihari Brigade reminds you that “Rock-n-Roll Thoughtcrime” can still save us. Keep asking questions. Be problematic.

Discover Motihari Brigade at mbrigade.com

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