Ruptured Album Release // SANDY CHAMOUN, ANTHONY SAHYOUN & JAD ATOUI // Ghadr


Releasing November 29, 2024 on Ruptured Records:

On Ghadr, Sandy Chamoun, Anthony Sahyoun and Jad Atoui play with chaos. Built on group improvisation, surges of coruscating electronics and distortion meld with vocals that, while stemming from a background in classical Arabic singing, seek to reroute tradition.
“We explore rhythmic structures that donโ€™t have specific time signatures,โ€ says Atoui about his and Sahyounโ€™s use of synthesis to embrace the tension between order and chaos. โ€œSandyโ€™s approach to singing isnโ€™t necessarily very rigid either. We felt a common inspiration.”

The album, whose title imperfectly translates to ‘Treachery’, began on a residency in Switzerland while the trio were touring Europe (Chamoun solo, Atoui and Sahyoun as their duo NP). It was later finished in their home city of Beirut. The five tracks are built on vibrant circuits of guitar and modular synthesis, the former often acting as a trigger for the latterโ€™s volatile output.

Chamounโ€™s vocals blend her background in classical Arabic music with free-singing, using tradition as a foundation for exploration rather than standards to follow. Apart from “Hayawanon Ghader (treacherous animal)”, all the songsโ€™ lyrics pull from the archive. Opener “Tahal Layl” interprets a Bedouin folk song. “Bihali” is based on a tenth century poem by Abou Firas Al-Hamdani. “Al Moulatham” quotes an Instagram post by Yousef Al-Domouky about the war in Gaza. “Al Samaa” uses a text from contemporary Lebanese poet Paul Chaoul. “Iโ€™m working with my references, and with the music,” explains Chamoun. “Itโ€™s a playful place with my history and now.”


WATCH a video excerpt by Nour Ouayda


About the albumโ€™s title, Chamoun explains: “On this planet, the only thing thatโ€™s happening now is treachery. Itโ€™s the headline of our days.”
Terror in Gaza, its shockwaves through the Middle-East and its place in longer histories loom over the record. However, while Ghadr reflects the present moment, it isnโ€™t consumed by it. The trio agree the album reflects tenderness as much as anger. Itโ€™s audible in the effortless swings between abstract and soaring. The way Chamounโ€™s lyrics put ninth century odes to a bird and ancient Bedouin love songs next to personal reflections by Al-Domouky or Chaoul on real world tragedies.

Sonically and lyrically Ghadr is music of possibility and potential. The five tracks travel through unbounded terrain rather than along fixed paths. “I donโ€™t like to pull the listener in one direction,” Chamoun continues. “You need to play with your imagination and not stick to one story and one meaning.”
While the record reflects their state of mind as residents of Lebanon, and the uncertainty that entails, Sahyoun suggests theyโ€™re striving to reach beyond it. “We try to access parts of our subconscious and see what dimensions it has outside of what weโ€™re witnessing day to day. When we play, thereโ€™s a rhythm between the three of us. We feel each other sway,”

Ghadr is the first release under the name Chamoun/Sahyoun/Atoui, but the trioโ€™s connection is deeply rooted. Sahyoun and Chamoun are members of ecstatic rock collective Sanam. Atoui and Sahyounโ€™s explorations of synthesis, solo and as NP, are long-running. On Ghadr these histories form something new. A charged record which faces the world as it is while offering glimpses of something else.

Daryl Worthington, September 2024


GHADR: Listen/Order here


Photo by Mizyed Alazraie

Press Review // Moose Terrific [Tamara Filyavich, Sam Shalabi] // Nude Beginnings

Acclaim for Moose Terrific’s album Nude Beginnings, released by Ruptured in July 2024 (cassette/digital):

“Low-key electronic vignettes, emphasising fun and hopefulness over rage and sorrow.” โ€“ Peter Hollo, Utility Fog broadcast (FBi Radio), July 2024
https://utilityfog.radio/archives/2024/07/

“The opening title track has cascading melodies which constantly evade predictability. โ€˜Fort Daโ€™ sounds like it could soundtrack a Sega game from the 1990s. โ€˜Jefferson Airportโ€™ reminds me of Shalabiโ€™sย Eidย album, but transposed from oud to electronics. Itโ€™s a mood which runs into closer โ€˜Bloomsdayโ€™, a droning synth and shuffling beat leading to a space somewhere betweenย Trans-Europe Express-era Kraftwerk and Sanam. Itโ€™s music which revels in crossovers and new connections.โ€ โ€“ Daryl Worthington, The Quietus, September 2024
https://thequietus.com/quietus-reviews/cassettes/spools-out-cassette-reviews-for-september-by-daryl-worthington/

Featured in The Atticโ€™s Staff Picks of July 2024:
https://theatticmag.com/news/2464/staff-picks-_-july-2024.html


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Press Review // Marmalsana [Burkhard Beins, Tony Elieh, Maurice Louca] // Marmalsana

Acclaim for Marmalsana’s album Marmalsana, released by Ruptured in July 2024 (cassette/digital):

“A singularly idiomatic music worth attending to.” โ€“ Peter Hollo, Utility Fog broadcast (FBi Radio), July 2024
https://utilityfog.radio/archives/2024/07/

“The tracks are plucked, rattled and thrummed exercises in nuanced rhythmic and textural exploration. The juxtapositions and tensions between melodic and non-idiomatic are entrancing, peaking on โ€˜Alvenoโ€™, when Louca plays out a jaunty, almost folky melody on the quarter tone guitar which the other two make a throbbing, creaking soundscape around. The whole album arcs like a storm rising and falling, with all the shifting pressure and unpredictable eddies of movement and sound that suggests.โ€ โ€“ Daryl Worthington, The Quietus, September 2024
https://thequietus.com/quietus-reviews/cassettes/spools-out-cassette-reviews-for-september-by-daryl-worthington/

“Itโ€™s a wonderful album that suggests how those reduced materials can be shepherded into something truly dynamic and exciting, all of it fueled by an obvious rapport and shared vision. Maurice Louca and Tony Elieh work together in multiple projects, including the great Arabic rock band Karkana, while Burkhard Beins and Elieh also have a duo called Zone Null, so the overlapping interests are nothing new. Still, intersecting ideas donโ€™t ever guarantee something this cohesive and absorbing.” โ€“ Peter Margasak, Nowhere Street substack, September 2024
https://petermargasak.substack.com/p/on-the-road-again

Featured in The Atticโ€™s Staff Picks of July 2024:
https://theatticmag.com/news/2464/staff-picks-_-july-2024.html


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