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Deceiver

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Download links and information about Deceiver by Muslimgauze. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Jazz, Dancefloor, World Music, Dance Pop genres. It contains 34 tracks with total duration of 02:15:18 minutes.

Artist: Muslimgauze
Release date: 1996
Genre: Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Jazz, Dancefloor, World Music, Dance Pop
Tracks: 34
Duration: 02:15:18
Buy on iTunes $19.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Deceiver 24:40
2. Palestine Is Our Islamic Land 6:05
3. Azeri Jab 4:48
4. A Parsee View 3:24
5. Zenana Acidbox 4:03
6. Herod-1 3:26
7. Sanskrit 4:02
8. Morsel of Sand 3:16
9. Yemani 1:41
10. Khshatrapa 3:06
11. Feztoun 1:44
12. A Parsee View 2:22
13. Deceiver (2) 3:56
14. Herod-2 2:41
15. Palestine Is Our Islamic Land (2) 4:14
16. Zameenzad 5:19
17. Balfour Blood 4:51
18. Unorthodox Singh Babel 2:28
19. Jagdish Masjid of Light 3:21
20. Naguib Amber Reptile 2:38
21. Saudi 4:04
22. Guru of Falsehood 2:52
23. Aquarabiq 2:01
24. Chandraswami 3:00
25. Sikandra an Fail 4:08
26. Mahfouz Ala 3:08
27. Rajputta 3:06
28. Akbars Final Fax 2:38
29. Jagdish Masjid of Night 3:22
30. Hinducash 1:03
31. Aquarabik 2:04
32. Free From a Veil 4:57
33. Red Swami 0:38
34. Red Swami, Pt. 12 & 13 6:12

Details

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Starting off with the quite lengthy first title track, which begins as a heavy-stomp monster that either is sampling a John Bonham drum part or is doing its best to sound like it is, then alternates between quieter and louder passages, Deceiver is another excellent entry in the limited-edition release series begun by Izlamaphobia. Like that other double-disc release, which showcased Bryn Jones moving into newer, less familiar sonic realms with his work, Deceiver has Muslimgauze working in extremis on a variety of fronts, if not quite as much (though pretty darned close nonetheless) as the earlier effort. One thing that definitely does carry over from Izlamaphobia is Jones' love for crunching drum and percussion sounds used in immediate, in-your-face approaches. Standouts in this vein, to name just two out of many, include "A Parsee View," one of the sharpest and most danceable things Muslimgauze released, with a massive beat and tight groove accompanied by what sounds like heavily-amplified clapping, and the very untypical "Herod-1," anchored around a pumped-up series of bass synth lines and a swirling, wordless female vocal sample. "Herod-2" takes the bass and gets even crazier with it, with backwards percussion and many strange twists and turns. The full blend of punch and experimentalism which characterized Izlamaphobia does crop up at points here as well, as with "Morsel of Sand," with several interlocked percussion lines, some quite clear and some heavily treated, accompanied only by a flute, and the body-rocking first "Jagdish Masjid of Light," which even has some wah-wah guitar snuck into the funk. The second "Jagdish" is no slouch either, with distortion and sonic overload worthy of Autechre to boot on top of everything else.