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Muslimgauze, Arabbox CD cover artwork

Muslimgauze, Arabbox

Audio CD

Disk ID: 1257968

Disk length: 1h 7m 27s (11 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 2003

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Muslimgauze...

Tracks & Durations

1. Ganges Swimmer 9:17
2. Kurdish Red 4:29
3. Arabbox11:47
4. Sadaambush 2:07
5. Veil Of Tear Gas 6:20
6. Mozaik Of Lies 6:49
7. Basra 8:03
8. Sistar Chador 3:12
9. Firozsha Baag 4:51
10. Dawa 5:18
11. Zenanna 5:07

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

Arabbox was recorded in 1993 following the first Gulf War. 10 years later, following the second Gulf War, Soleilmoon is pleased to finally release this important Muslimgauze album. On April 15, 2003, we issued it in an expensive limited edition of 500 copies, packed in a hand-made metal box. This second edition, in an edition of 1000 copies, is released without the box but has a friendly price. It's commonly known that Bryn Jones, the late musician behind Muslimgauze, was driven by the passion of the Palestinian people's fight for an independent homeland. What is less well understood is how he found inspiration in other parts of the Muslim world, including Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. India, with its dominant hindu culture, might seem like an odd place to include in the list, until you remember that more than one hundred million Muslims live there. In fact Jones, who loved language and wordplay (consider the name "Muslimgauze", for example), frequently plundered the south Asian subcontinent throughout his long musical career for song titles and album names, coming up with gems like "Old Bombay Vinyl Junkie" and "Tandoori Dog". So it's not surprising that two song titles on ARABBOX can be traced to India. "Ganges Swimmer", heard in another form on the Staalplaat CD Izlamaphobia, and "Firozsha Baag", the fictitious Bombay (now Mumbai) setting for a collection of interconnected stories by Indo-Canadian author Rohington Mistry. Thus it is appropriate that the images and packaging of this release are derived from India. But Iraq is very much in the news again, and that country is not neglected here. Track names like "Kurdish Red", "Sadaambush", and "Basra" all come directly from that region. Incredibly, it seems the more things change, the more they stay the same.

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