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observer's avatar

Jones was prophetic. He was tapping into something primordial. A malevolent energy that was building underneath the Middle East. The almost Lovecraftian perception of oil as some kind of Djinn, possessing people, turning them against one another. It's often isolated autistic individuals who can recognize patterns like this before anyone else. Jones essentially predicted 9/11 with his work. It's chaotic and disjointed because that was the essence he was trying to capture. He wasn't attempting to make something as trite and feeble minded as a political statement. He was doing his best to capture the nervous, anxiety ridden energy of a powder-keg about to explode. He succeeded amazingly well. There is nothing else quite like Muslimgauze that manages to perfectly capture the cultural, philosophical, and idealogical claustrophobia of the Middle East.

It's the only place on Earth where you have dozens of different groups, all at each others throats, with blood feuds that stretch back centuries, all packed together into a small handful of habitable zones amongst endless miles of deadly desert. All of the album and song titles, the liner notes, the graphics, the photographs, the typography etc. is absolutely essential to the work; precisely because it is instrumental. I don't know how you completely missed that. He's beating you over the head trying to explain this instrumental music isn't about some bloke going on vacation and being inspired; as it almost always is with everyone else from the West who makes Middle Eastern influenced music. In his later years he spoke about specifically not visiting the Middle East, even after having been invited, because it could jeopardize the integrity of the project. That it could turn it into something kitsch and self-centred. His refusal to travel showcases his utmost integrity regarding his own work.

The fact that he was so geographically removed from the region was the only way something like Muslimgauze could come to exist. It took a complete outsider looking in, with a virgin set of eyes, to accurately capture all the minute details of that atmosphere. All those tiny fractured elements would be totally benign to a local, like cultural wallpaper, that their eyes (and in this case ears) have adjusted to ignore. His distance from his subject matter was essential. It wasn't a drawback or somehow invalidated his work as you seem to suggest. The Middle East is so monolithic and dense that the closer one approaches the more indecipherable it becomes. The only way Jones could manage to condense it down into something digestible was by observing from an adequate distance away. This is a problem everyone to this day still faces when attempting to make any kind of art about the Middle East or the conflicts there. Jones is one of the few to manage to find a way to really convey the essence and the spirit of that region in sonic form. As I said before, not just the sounds of the instruments but the anxiety and instability, the shifting of the sands, the influence of oil and the long dark shadow it seems to cast.

Basically, you didn't get it.

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donaldparkinson's avatar

Very strange article - the assumption that Jones has only a superficial surface level understanding of the topics he references in his song titles seems unwarranted and based on pretty much nothing. The kinds of obscure historical and political references he makes show that the guy clearly is someone who is obsessed with the Palestinian struggle, as well as the broader struggle of the Arab peoples against imperialism, as well as someone who very much connects to these struggles on some emotional level. Maybe this is cringe whiteboi orientalism, and of course I do think he probably fetishes some unsavory political figures, but acting like this is all just irrelevant to the music is just ridiculous. John Coltrane could have named Africa/Brass anything else, sure, but he named it the way he did because he felt there was a connection between his sonic explorations and Africa. Bryn Jones clearly felt that the sounds he was making related to the references in his work and it seems like some don't want to respect this because it makes them uncomfortable perhaps.

Tell me that the menacing ambient soundscapes of "Return of Black September" have only an arbitrary connection to their namesake - when I listen to that album, I enter the headspace of a Palestinian commando about to embark on overthrowing the Jordanian government or hijack an airplane. Maybe this is something that people see as bad taste and pointlessly edgy, but I share at the very least Jones' support for the Palestinians and respect for the cultures of the Middle East, and this is only enhances the experience of Muslimgauze.

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