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Blue Mosque

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Download links and information about Blue Mosque by Muslimgauze. This album was released in 1994 and it belongs to Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Dancefloor, World Music, Dance Pop genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 01:43:21 minutes.

Artist: Muslimgauze
Release date: 1994
Genre: Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Dancefloor, World Music, Dance Pop
Tracks: 19
Duration: 01:43:21
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Buy on Songswave €2.91

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Muzzel of Deceit 2:53
2. Yusef 6:00
3. Bir Zeit 6:29
4. Rattan Kiss 12:25
5. Bitter Citrus 5:25
6. Qiblah 5:46
7. Futile Arad Search 6:04
8. Blue Mosque 3:30
9. Fadhaa 4:01
10. Bandit Queen 3:29
11. Freedom Fighter 2:48
12. Kirpan 6:30
13. Galbanum Tingktyur 4:08
14. Pakistani Nuclear Box 10:07
15. Muilah Rockets 3:58
16. Zingari 5:09
17. Blue Mosque 6:50
18. I Am Khalid Al Istambuli 6:14
19. I Am Khalid Al Istambuli (2) 1:35

Details

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While "Muzzel of Deceit" isn't as strong an introduction to this double-disc effort as earlier tracks were for their respective albums, it's still a fair effort. It shows Muslimgauze continuing the work begun on Zealot, where dub-wise production techniques blend with drones and at times slamming beats, — "Freedom Fighter" being a great example of this (why Muslimgauze hasn't been more readily sampled by other artists remains a mystery) — to create a very modern form out of traditional types of music. "Bir Zeit" stands out here, due to its aggressive electronic feel and distorted rhythm track elements (intentional here as compared to Zealot); though the track is mixed relatively low, it sets up an excellent air of looming menace thanks to the strange whispering throughout the track. "Futile Arad Search" is another fine piece; it relies on a strange percussion loop that seems constructed from anything but regular percussion instruments which are set against a slightly more conventional rhythm that surfaces from the wash of sound in the mix. Particularly striking is one part where little but a soft drum machine beat and the sudden shudder of a tambourine come to the fore. Other songs worthy of attention include "Fadhan," with its wheezing electronics layered below a traditional drum performance, the jaunty swing of "Bandit Queen," with its quirky keyboard hook, and the slow, compelling crawl of "Pakistani Nuclear Box." Longer tunes like "Rattan Kiss" sometimes succeed, and sometimes don't; occasionally rising from the music's foreground is the unfortunate slide from entrancing minimalism to relative boredom which can afflict Muslimgauze releases. While not quite up to the same level as Zealot, Blue Mosque is still another fine Muslimgauze release.