• Muslimgauze - No Human Rights For Arabs In Israel
  • Muslimgauze - No Human Rights For Arabs In Israel

Muslimgauze - No Human Rights For Arabs In Israel

Staalplaat

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Double-CD archival business from the late Muslimgauze, served up via Staalplaat in the continued mission to preserve and keep unleashing from the vast vault of his Palestine-dedicated works.

No Human Rights For Arabs In Israel hightlights an ongoing issue which denies Palestinians the same rights in the ethnostate of Israel, where Apartheid presents itself especially in the West Bank (Palestine) and where the ongoing issue denies millions of Palestinians that have been made refugees since the 1948 Nakba their right of return to their homeland, whilst non-native people of Jewish descent are granted near immediate rights in Israel... This is just a fraction of the story of course, we could continue and go deeper here, but we'd hope that most of you have done your research and read up on the truths and undeniable facts that make up the violent propostion of the Israeli expansion at the cost of Palestinians rights and livelihoods, ever since Lord Balfour wrote his colonial declaration in 1912, pretty much ignoring the rights of the indigenous Palestinians over a jewish minority, which was mostly living in peace and harmony before political gains of Zionism and western meddling overrode human rights, equality and justice for all.

Musically speaking - we find Muslimgauze in a raw and wickedly unpolished mode, letting scuffed drum machine rhythms urge their way through feedback melodics, overdriven bass and of course field recordings and sample tapestries from Palestine, then, and now.

18 cuts, served across two CDS in a stark DIY type packaging. 200 copies only.

As Staalplaat say:

"Blending atmospheric electronics, techno-influenced loops, and distorted textures, this is one of Muslimgauze’s more rhythmically relentless works. It recalls early ’80s industrial-funk hybrids, with touches of Psychic TV, Bootsy Collins, and dubby grit woven into its fabric. The »Refugee« tracks lean into raw, metallic tension, while the »Teargas« pieces offer more structured beats and voice samples that channel protest through sound. The closing 20-minute track moves from hypnotic rhythm to ambient dissolution, allowing the album to fade into abstraction.

A powerful and focused release, it stands tall in Muslimgauze’s vast catalogue—both politically potent and musically uncompromising."

As Bryn Jones would've no doubt said - make your voice heard...
FREE PALESTINE - freedom, justice, equal rights for all!