UK-based artists, Webmoms, and Dizraeli join forces in a brutally honest and musically daring collaboration, "Call It What It Is." The track is a searing wake-up call, delivered with razor-sharp lyricism, aching truth, and fearless conviction. Based in the lineage of conscious hip-hop, "Call It What It Is" throws punches without raising its voice. The delivery from both Webmoms and Dizraeli is calm yet forceful, and every word lands with a punch, directed not at sensationalism but at what is unequivocally true.
Their lines may be steady, cool even, but they are incandescent with rage in content, listing those hard facts, that checklist, those numbers, those wannabe-myths made flesh as so much unassailable truth and a rapid ceasefire in Gaza. The track is also an exhibition of an invention. Webmoms' form of production does not conform to traditional hip-hop structures. It sways through a heady concoction of alternative hip-hop, experimental R&B, and progressive house. The beat pulses and swells beneath the words like a troubled heartbeat, making space, building tension, and setting the scene simultaneously. There's an emotional heft to every synth swell and bashed drum mirroring the urgency of the subject matter. Dizraeli, celebrated for his spoken word prowess, introduces a poetic solemnity that transforms the song into something almost sacred.
With Webmoms, who returns the ferocity with biting accuracy, the two create a dynamic that is raw, courageous, and irreversibly human. "Call It What It Is" is not light listening. It's the sort of track that challenges you to pay attention to it. It's a protest, a prayer, and a poetic argument for accountability rolled into one. And what's even more gripping is how little it tries to pander. It's a gut-level creative act from two artists who obviously won't look away. At a time when experimental sounds are more important than substance, this song has both in spades. It's exquisitely made, and shudderingly discomforting. And that's the point. On "Call It What It Is," they've made a record that dares to speak plainly in an era when too many others won't.
Discover Webmoms on Instagram