Save Ourselves
“Motihari Brigade takes a bold stance, using their music not just to entertain but to spark deeper thinking, a kind of rebellion that challenges both sound and mindset.” Zillions
“Our obsession with Motihari Brigade seems to grow with every listen.” KIMU
“As anticipation builds for the release of Problematic on June 25, 2026, “Save Ourselves” provides a fascinating introduction to the ideas at the heart of the project. It is a bold and thought-provoking piece of rock music that rewards careful listening.” NuvaPulse
“As a first glimpse into Problematic, ‘Save Ourselves’ successfully introduces the album’s overarching concept while standing strongly on its own. Motihari Brigade’s self-described “Rock-n-Roll Thoughtcrime” proves to be more than a clever slogan, it is a genuine artistic mission.” MusoCasa
“Why Motihari Brigade Wants You To Question Everything” (A deep dive interview on the philosophy-rock behind “Save Ourselves”) Punk Head
“Save Ourselves is the rallying cry of an album dedicated to restoring the defiant spirit of independent thought in an age that increasingly discourages it. Where do the questioners go when society becomes the cult? Motihari Brigade suggest they go to rock and roll…“ Apricot Magazine
“Motihari Brigade has delivered a bold, riff-driven single that feels both timely and timeless. It’s strong, thoughtful rock music with genuine purpose.” Eat This Rock
“It really makes you stop and think about how wild the modern world has become.” Beach House
“A defiant call to arms for independent minds in an age of new dogmas” Our Sound Music
“In a world increasingly programmed to tell us what to think, Motihari Brigade’s ‘Save Ourselves’ argues that asking difficult questions may be the last truly radical act.” TrackTally UK
“Defiant, urgent, provocative, and intellectually rebellious, “Save Ourselves” is a musical reset button for grounding your own independent thoughts in today’s highly propagandised world.” Cougar Microbes
“‘Save Ourselves’ is not interested in telling audiences what to think. Instead, it encourages them to keep thinking . . . . If this single is any indication, Problematic could become one of the more intriguing independent rock releases of the year.” Pulse Hutch
“‘Save Ourselves”’ is, at its heart, a deep statement on human freedom. The song hints that today’s society has replaced the old religious restrictions with new secular dogmas. Today we live in a techno-dystopia where computer algorithms, regulated realities, and official media narratives strive to tell us what to think and how to behave. This promotes groupthink and intolerance and not independent thought. The track is an important defense of the ‘problematic thinker’ who doesn’t just go with the flow, questioning where does the independent mind go when society itself starts to act like a cult . . . . It reveals the raw energy of rock-n-roll as the highest manifestation of rebellion through artistic expression.” Plus One Reviews
“The vocals on this track are amazingly simple, raw and absolutely honest. It would be a quiet conversation we would have with ourselves in the mirror, going from soft thoughts to a hard, quiet strength. The band keeps the music pure and natural and helps us gaze inside instead of looking for distractions on the outside. This honest voice whispers softly to us that the leaders and social groupings to whom we once turned for guidance do not have the answers we need.” Allen Peterson Reviews
“It carries the energy of protest, but its drive comes from questioning rather than slogan-chasing, making the song feel urgent and intellectually restless. best of all, it actually slaps too. Introvert Disco
“It’s rock music with a philosopher’s scowl, reaching for something older than algorithms and harder to flatten . . . . ‘Save Ourselves’ lands as both warning and invitation: keep asking questions, stay troublesome, and don’t mistake consensus for truth.” Songplode
The Great Refusal
“Needless to say, we absolutely agree with the message and the stadium-ready, psychedelic-adjacent accompanying sound that is fully human-created.” KIMU
“Motihari Brigade are updating socially conscious rock for a generation raised on algorithms, endless notifications, digital overload and AI.” Sinusoidal Music
“You simply can’t resist being absolutely hooked” Lost In The Manor
“There is something deeply cinematic about Motihari Brigade’s “The Great Refusal . . . . Their music challenges listeners to think while still delivering the emotional immediacy that great rock music demands.” Falcodice
“The fusion of retro sounds with modern themes makes this single remarkable. The engaging rhythm and sharp lyrics create an effective commentary on the world today.” Edgar Allan Poets
“The music feels warm, human, and analog, while the lyrics question an increasingly digital world.” Lelahel Metal
“Problematic now feels less like an album title and more like a manifesto a demand for independent thought in an era increasingly shaped by curated narratives and digital obedience.” Melody Lens
“Motihari Brigade are not merely reviving protest rock; they are reinventing it for a generation trapped between technological convenience and philosophical uncertainty.” Melody Arena
“As the album Problematic approaches its release, The Great Refusal sets the tone for a conversation about technology, power, and human agency . . . . and Motihari Brigade’s words resonate profoundly with us.” Black Fruit Apparel
“The band’s broader mythology only intensifies the experience.” Hailtunes
“Motihari Brigade demonstrates that politically conscious music does not need to sacrifice energy or creativity in order to communicate meaningful ideas.” Hit Harmony Haven
“The Great Refusal is the digital detox anthem we all need in this Armageddon age of digital bloom and doom.” Cougar Microbes
“It’s a song that strikes a balance between sharp musicianship and meaningful intent, a preview of an album that looks set to challenge, provoke, and inspire in equal measure.” HypeHub Magazine
“In an era shaped by digital algorithms and prefabricated answers, Motihari Brigade deliver something rare: music that sparks debate, poses questions, and serves as a reminder that critical thinking remains one of the most valuable human faculties.” Musik Galaxie
“…a fierce and provocative rock statement that blends raw musical energy with sharp social commentary . . . . Motihari Brigade are building an artistic movement rooted in questioning authority and defending independent thought.” Music Mingle
“It is a bold preview of what promises to be one of the more conceptually ambitious independent rock releases of 2026.” Musikepool
“Without a doubt, we’re dealing with a track that leaves a great impression for the new album.” Music For All
“The ambitious collective Motihari Brigade forcefully reminds us that true art is born from the gut and from human imperfection—unique elements that no algorithm could ever simulate. A magnificent track, heavy with meaning, and essential listening for anyone who refuses to see human creativity capitulate to the tyranny of databases.” Iggy Magazine
“Their music asks difficult questions fearlessly, demanding listeners stay awake, stay curious, and stay human defiantly.” Music Earshot
“As a precursor to Problematic, the single sets a high bar, promising a project that is as intellectually engaging as it is musically compelling.” Distortion Diaries
“The single teases an upcoming album that promises to challenge listeners intellectually while still delivering adrenaline-fueled rock energy. If Problematic continues at this level, Motihari Brigade may have created the soundtrack for a generation exhausted by artificial reality and desperate for authentic voices.” MusoCasa
“An anthemic, soaring chorus that practically begs you to malfunction on purpose . . . . a sarcastic raw collision of punk rock and alternative hard rock designed to agitate . . . . Will we actually fight the algorithm, or just casually stream our own obsolescence?” Music Arena GH
“Being present in their soundscape means to be consumed by it.” The Whistling Traveller
You wanna talk about a band with some balls? Motihari Brigade just dropped a single called “The Great Refusal” that takes a sledgehammer to the whole AI panic – and they do it with a smirk, a middle finger, and one of the nastiest guitar riffs I’ve heard all year . . . . That’s punk rock.” Buzzy Band
“A defiant anthem for the digital age.” Hella Fuzz
“The listening experience is intense and timeless, with Winston slowly inviting listeners into a nuanced and complex lyrical universe, almost like entering a complex fever-dream.” Mesmerized
“Rock music has always had a peculiar relationship with its own extinction. Every decade produces at least one obituary — usually written by someone who has just purchased the very album that proves them wrong. Motihari Brigade, arriving with the sharp clatter of ‘The Great Refusal,’ are the latest to decline the funeral invitation, and they do so with considerably more wit and moral fury than the genre typically manages.” Indie Dock Music Blog
“Their music stands as a challenge to conformity, embracing the rebellious spirit that first defined rock and roll while directing that energy toward contemporary concerns.” Plastic Magazine
“Lyrically, the song addresses more urgent modern concerns, specifically that of the threatening, frightening rise of Artificial Intelligence and the consequent loss of all that makes us human in the long run.” Lost In The Manor
“Bold, intelligent, and unapologetically confrontational, The Great Refusal proves that rock music can still function as both entertainment and a catalyst for critical thought.” Splendiferous Pioneer
“The track is built like an anthem that grows and climbs into itself. Folding and looping back into itself, the grooves get better and better.” Apollo’s Harp
“The song’s central refrain, “The Great Refusal is upon us,” lands as both a warning and a rallying cry, capturing the band’s fascination with independent thought and resistance to algorithm-driven culture. The result is a track that feels simultaneously urgent, rebellious, and surprisingly reflective.” Tracktally UK
“One of the song’s greatest strengths lies in its ability to spark debates that extend far beyond the realm of music . . . . Themes of independent thought, media manipulation, technological power, and social conformity suggest a work more concerned with challenging questions than with comfortable answers . . . . Ultimately, what makes this song so compelling is its refusal to simplify reality. It embraces contradiction, satire, and uncertainty while retaining the raw energy of guitar-driven rock.” Melodie Maven
“What adds an extra layer of intrigue is the band’s self-awareness. The accompanying lyric video, created with the very technology the song questions, introduces a deliberate irony. This contradiction doesn’t weaken the message—it sharpens it, highlighting the complexity of resisting something so deeply embedded in modern life. ‘The Great Refusal’ ultimately succeeds because it balances message and momentum. It’s not just commentary—it’s a kinetic, engaging track that invites listeners to think while still delivering a compelling sonic experience.” The Musical Road
“Rock has always lived and survived as an act of criticism and opposition to the system . . . . ‘The Great Refusal’ makes rock pulse through our veins, with a catchy chorus that sticks in our heads; we feel that wind of freedom, we want to get in the car, drive on the open road, enjoy a sunny day, turn on the radio and crank up the volume listening to this track.” Indieoclock
“The song acts out the paradox at the core of its theme, switching between defiance and reflection. ‘The Great Refusal’ explores resistance in an age of technology as both creator and destroyer. The visuals of the project also drip with irony, especially the AI-powered lyric video.This adds to the layers of meaning and the line between critique and participation. That tension bleeds into the art itself, making the release self-aware and conceptually brave.” Honk Magazine
“The new single from Motihari Brigade largely succeeds, not because it offers solutions, but because it understands that the most interesting cultural responses to artificial intelligence are rooted in contradiction . . . . A sharp, provocative statement that transforms contemporary technological unease into something visceral, intelligent and unexpectedly danceable.” Chromatic Club
“In an era defined by digital algorithms and pre-packaged answers, Motihari Brigade deliver something rare: music that sparks debate, raises questions, and reminds us that critical thinking remains one of the most valuable human capabilities.” Musik Galaxie
“‘The Great Refusal’ feels like rock evolving in real time — experimental, aware, playful, a reminder that even when the themes get heavier, music can still dance, question, and laugh at the same time.” https://the-further.com/motihari-brigade-rebellion-rhythm-and-reflection.” The Further
“It’s straightforward rock with teeth, and sometimes that’s exactly what you want when every other band is chasing some glossy, processed sound.” Little Chief Music
Fortunate Son
“This version of Fortunate Son reminds me of a cover that makes me want to go back to the original and listen to it differently. That’s quite an accomplishment.” NeoSonic
“I didn’t expect it to hit this hard . . . . The fact that it’s just an album preview makes it more exciting, knowing we’re getting a full album. If the rest of the record has the same amount of energy and attitude, then it may be something really memorable.” Songscope
“Fortunate Son is an explosive, timely release that respects its source material while finding its own clear identity. The Motihari Brigade give a familiar anthem new life with themes that are immediate and relevant, lending the original a new urgency. Expectations are high for the full album release and this single offers a tantalizing preview of a band not afraid to challenge, provoke and spark conversations with their music.” Soaplife Magazine
“Motihari Brigade takes the spirit, urgency, and rebellious heartbeat that made “Fortunate Son” iconic in the first place and adds enough firepower to make it unmistakably their own. The result is a blistering, emotionally charged release that hits hard from start to finish.” Hypehub Magazine
“One of the most viscerally anti-war songs ever committed to tape — has a new voice.” Rock Era Magazine
“At its core, this is a bold, fiery cover that turns a timeless anthem into an urgent 2026 protest statement. Raw, intense, and impossible to ignore.” Eat This Rock
“…a single that will have you reaching for the repeat button.” FVMusicBlog
“This cover is not a standalone statement, but rather part of a larger conceptual framework exploring themes of power, distortion, and systemic critique.” Musik Galaxie
“Motihari Brigade’s Fortunate Son feels like it could start a revolution . . . . And if this cover is just a teaser of a mini-rock opera revival, then what comes next is not really here to play it safe.” The Gatekeeper Space
“Motihari Brigade’s new single, “Fortunate Son,” is a proper rock-and-roll hit.” Sinusoidal Music
“What an extraordinary performance from a group that obviously knows the significance of their tales. This has certainly left me truly moved, and I look forward to finding out just what will be taken apart next.” Biography Web
“Motihari Brigade don’t just cover ‘Fortunate Son’ — they drag its warning into the modern world and make it feel frighteningly current.” Musikepool
“Needless to say, we are in awe” KIMU
“… this is not simply a cover but a conceptual bridge into the larger universe Motihari Brigade is constructing . . . . Rock-n-Roll Thoughtcrime, a creative ethos rooted in questioning systems of control and perception.” Dulaxi
“Motihari Brigade allows the anger and conviction within the performance to remain front and centre, giving the song an authenticity that many modern rock recordings struggle to capture.” Melody Lens
“The band turns a protest classic into something that feels freshly agitated” Illustrate Magazine
It is protest music reborn for an era still trapped inside the same cycles of war, power, and manipulation the original warned about nearly sixty years ago! Rock Era Magazine
“Some cover versions exist merely to pay tribute. Others serve to remind us that a song never truly loses its bite.” ExtraVAFrench
“Fortunate Son remains, fifty-seven years later, the most uncomfortably relevant piece of American rock and roll ever committed to tape. Which raises an obvious question: why would anyone bother covering it? Motihari Brigade have an answer, and it arrives approximately four seconds into this recording.” Indie Dock Music Blog
“It’s not just a cover, it’s a fresh look that makes the song’s message more relevant to today’s issues.” Zillions Magazine
“With this audacious reinterpretation, the musicians of Motihari Brigade pull off the remarkable feat of transforming this classic into a resolutely modern manifesto.” Iggy Magazine
“Motihari Brigade use a familiar protest song as a launchpad for their own ideas, reshaping it into something more immediate and unsettling. If this release is meant to set the tone, listeners should expect an album that doesn’t just entertain but challenges them to pay closer attention to the world around them.” NuvaPulse
“Motihari Brigade’s cover of Fortunate Son doesn’t just revisit a classic, it detonates it . . . . The revival of the “mini-rock opera” concept suggests an ambitious, interconnected narrative that extends far beyond this single.” Melody Arena
“Listening to this cover results in an energetic thrill that is hard to ignore.” Edgar Allan Poets
“Covering such a well known rock song is never easy, especially one that already carries so much attitude and history behind it, but Motihari Brigade managed to make it exciting in their own way without losing the spirit of the original.” Cheers To The Vikings
Problematic:
Motihari Brigade’s new album “Problematic” is here to restore a defiant spirit of independent critical thinking in this age of artificially-curated digital algorithms. Feel vibrato electric guitar strings shake loose a world of illusions. There is hope that Motihari Brigade’s brand of “Rock-n-Roll Thoughtcrime” can still inspire us to “Save Ourselves” – perhaps.
“Problematic” is Motihari Brigade’s third album, and the invention of guitarist, singer, and songwriter Eric Winston. The band derives its name from Motihari, India, birthplace of their truth-seeking spirit animal George Orwell. Problematic is scheduled for release on June 25, 2026 (George Orwell’s birthday) and will be available through popular digital streaming and download services, and on compact disc.