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Fatah Guerrilla

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Download links and information about Fatah Guerrilla by Muslimgauze. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Jazz, Dancefloor, World Music, Dance Pop genres. It contains 31 tracks with total duration of 02:56:29 minutes.

Artist: Muslimgauze
Release date: 1996
Genre: Ambient, Electronica, Techno, Jazz, Dancefloor, World Music, Dance Pop
Tracks: 31
Duration: 02:56:29
Buy on iTunes $29.99
Buy on Songswave €4.98

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Devour 9:56
2. Devour (2) 9:52
3. Khalifate 9:39
4. Imad Akel 8:05
5. Khalifate 9:47
6. Imal Akel 6:20
7. Fatah Guerrilla 9:14
8. Shishla Nain Royal Bidjar 4:22
9. Minaret Above All Others 4:53
10. Saleem Bou 5:07
11. Khidmutghar One/Two/Three 10:06
12. Dizurt 7:28
13. Imam Shamil 1837 3:25
14. Enjinn 5:20
15. Dacoit Guild 2:04
16. Deceive For Yourself 1:26
17. Anti-Arab Media Censor 4:50
18. Negev Gulag 7:17
19. Hakeem Alkimi 4:15
20. Shaduf 1:33
21. Resume and Shaduf 5:35
22. Gifts From an Afghan 5:31
23. Pahlavi Engineer 7:56
24. Guilded Gulag Mind-er 2:42
25. Under the Influence of Kolera 4:34
26. Devotion of Abdul Karim 3:51
27. Camel Abuse Does Not Egzist In Mogadisu 4:19
28. Girl In a Red Turban 5:01
29. Peacock Headress 3:56
30. Sari of Acidic Colors 4:54
31. Untitled 3:11

Details

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Muslimgauze expands into ever-more lengthy projects with this three-disc release, each disc being at least an hour long and separately titled. On Fatah Guerrilla, Bryn Jones manages a neat encapsulation of the various styles and phases of Muslimgauze, intentionally or not, over the course of the entire work. The first disc, Muhammadunize, has what could be called a classic feel to it, with a very familiar blend of drones, string instruments, and synths, and varying percussion/breakbeat patterns, in turn mixed with a number of hard-to-catch vocal samples. It's a formula used many times in the past by Jones, yet somehow he still manages to keep things just fresh enough, investing songs like the first and second "Khalifate" and especially both slamming versions of "Imad Akel" with enough unexpected touches. He incorporates the basic power of his work in the tracks as well, with both beauty and a nervy, hard-to-define tension as the songs progress. Tajik and Persian Blind, the second disc, generally fits in the vein of Izlamaphobia or Deceiver — the title track from the latter briefly resurfaces as "Deceive for Yourself" — with the combination of massive beats (e.g., "Shisla Nain Royal Bidjar") and aggro-arty, Aphex Twin-styled production ("Dizurt"); the one-ringer "Negev Gulag," recorded three years previously, is thrown in as well. As might be guessed from its title, the final disc, Chechnya Over Dub, plays up the dub aesthetics which are always lurking at the heart of Muslimgauze's work — though generally in more abstract and indirect senses than might be expected — while also mixing and matching all of the previously mentioned strands, from the bass-heavy rumble of "Resume and Shaduf" to the utterly minimal ambience of "Sari of Acidic Colours." The whole release is a bit much to take all in a row, but the set is, nonetheless, another good effort from Jones.