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World, blues, desert, poet.
“Brahim’s keening take on Afro-blues, is beautiful, bewitching, aquiver with timeless sorrow.” --- Mojo
“This is a sound and message that reaches the heart, beyond imposed borders, curfews and barbed wire, with a dream for the end to the struggle.” --- The Quietus
Sahrawi singer-songwriter activist Aziza Brahim’s fifth album Mawja (Wave in Hassaniya Arabic) is fashioned from a simple but powerful foundational palette: Saharan and Iberian percussion entwining with stately guitars and warm, enveloping bass.
Co-produced by Brahim with long-time collaborator Guillem Aguilar, the record from her oeuvre that Mawja most sonically resembles is her revered and graceful debut Soutak (2014).
That noted, there is a confident eclecticism found here, an expansive take on her vision that even includes a drum pattern inspired by the Clash.
Brahim’s voice, as always, is a wellspring of deep and resonant emotions. The yearning for homeland. The struggle for freedom. The love for one's elders. The unfurling of time. Waves of history, waves of sound.
Tracks:
01. Bein trab u lihjar
02. Thajliba
03. Duaa
04. Marhabna 2.1
05. Bubisher
06. Ljaima likbira
07. Mawja
08. Metal, madera
09. Haiyu ya zuwar
10. Fuadi
Staat er compleet op, 10% pars mee gepost. Met zeer veel dank aan de originele poster. Laat af en toe eens weten wat je van het album vindt. Altijd leuk, de mening van anderen. Oh ja, MP3 doe ik niet aan.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e51JTot1IXo
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