Momma I Salute You is a powerful 12-track project that blends personal reflection, social commentary, and spiritual resilience into a body of work that honors both heritage and healing. At its core, the album is a salute—to mothers, to truth, to the struggle, and to the unshakable spirit that endures through every season of life.
Opening with the heartfelt title track “Momma I Salute You,” Shalom sets the tone with gratitude and reverence. From there, the album shifts between raw honesty and sharp cultural critique: “Same Old Rerun” and “Fear Bomb” examine the cycles of manipulation and fear shaping society, while “Call-’em-Home” speaks to the sacred duty of parenting, urging mothers and fathers to take responsibility and guide their children back home—into love, safety, and accountability.

Tracks like “Scenic Route,” “I’m Grieving,” and “I’m Healing” move listeners through deeply human emotions—loss, reflection, and renewal—offering balance to the album’s social and political weight. “Shadow Structure (Master Builder)” and “Made in America” dig into systemic truths, exposing hidden frameworks while reclaiming identity and pride.

The project sharpens its edge with “Do The Math,” a call to accountability that challenges listeners to weigh the cost and benefit of their choices—reminding us that every action carries a price and every decision shapes tomorrow. “The FairTax Act (No More Games)” follows with pointed commentary on economic justice and reform, pushing for transparency and fairness in how systems impact everyday lives.

The journey closes on the bittersweet note of “I Love Too Much,” a song that speaks to the painful reality of loving someone deeply while watching them hurt themselves through pride or darkness. It’s a testament to love’s strength—not in clinging, but in stepping back, allowing space for growth, and letting go not out of spite, but out of faith in what love can still nurture from afar.

Momma I Salute You is more than music—it’s a living testimony, weaving together parental responsibility, personal grief, collective struggle, and a vision for healing.

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MA Shalom

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