Muslimgauze Explained

Muslimgauze
Birth Name:Bryn Jones
Birth Date:1961 6, df=yes
Birth Place:Salford, England, United Kingdom
Death Place:Manchester, England, United Kingdom
Years Active:1982–1998
Website:www.muslimgauze.org

Muslimgauze was the main musical project of Bryn Jones (17 June 1961 – 14 January 1999),[1] a British ethnic electronica and experimental musician who was influenced by conflicts and history in the Muslim world, often with an emphasis on the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. With dozens of albums released under the Muslimgauze name, Jones was prolific, but he never achieved mainstream success. His music has been described by one critic as "among the most startling and unique in the noise underground."[2]

Despite his project name, Jones never converted to Islam.[3] The name Muslimgauze is a play on the word muslin (a type of gauze)[4] [5] combined with Muslim, referring to Jones' preoccupation with conflicts throughout the Muslim world.

Biography

Early musical career

Jones first released music in 1982 as on Kinematograph, his own imprint, and the independent co-op label Recloose, run by Simon Crab. came from the do-it-yourself (DIY) ethos of the time and was musically composed of electronic/experimental drone with occasional synth-melodic hooks and use of radio broadcast samples.

Releases at the time were occasionally on cassette, more often vinyl EPs and LPs; the longest-running of Jones' label monikers, Limited Editions, started with Hunting Out with an Aerial Eye (1984) followed by Buddhist on Fire, put out by Recloose the same year. Since then, Jones roughly released an album a year, given scarce financial resources until 1988, when he began making inroads with then-emerging labels Staalplaat, Soleilmoon, and Extreme Records.

By the late 1980s, Jones ran out of funding to self-release, and other labels that did put out Muslimgauze releases such as Recloose and Permis De Construire (which put out Coup d'Etat) did not pay promised royalties. Recloose head Simon Crab cited lack of sales and damaged records from firebombing as his reason.

At this time, distributors Soleilmoon, Staalplaat, and Extreme Records transitioned to becoming labels with the advent of the compact disc format,[6] which became less expensive to produce and ship than vinyl over time and gradually became a physical staple of the Muslimgauze catalogue.

Later musical career

It was with the release of United States of Islam (1991) a formalised agreement was reached with Extreme Records, which helped fund professional studio recordings, designed attractive packaging, and used a more extensive distribution network. Though pleased at first, Jones was frustrated with Extreme's one-release-a-year policy and in 1993 signed with then-sibling labels Soleilmoon and Staalplaat, which offered a more frequent release schedule. 1993 saw the release of Vote Hezbollah, Veiled Sisters and a re-release of Iran on Soleilmoon and Hamas Arc, Satyajit Eye and Betrayal on Staalplaat. His 1998 record Mullah Said on the label has been critically acclaimed.

Jones additionally released material on nearly any small label that approached him. A drawback with releasing on so many labels was gratuitous editing by producers and, through design or circumstance, no royalties. Extreme cited betrayal by distribution networks that were unscrupulous or filed for bankruptcy and could not pay—though they also claimed to have eventually remunerated Jones. Lack of due royalties was a source of ongoing stress throughout Jones's career.

Jones once stated that he never had time to listen to other people's music, although in a 1992 interview with Impulse Magazine, he mentioned that he enjoyed traditional music of Japan, the Middle East, and India, as well as the works of artists such as Can, Throbbing Gristle, Wire, and Faust.

Death

On 30 December 1998, Jones was rushed to A&E in Manchester with a rare fungal infection in his bloodstream, for which he had to be heavily sedated. He contracted pneumonia and died on 14 January 1999.[7]

Legacy

Since Bryn Jones's death in 1999 at the age of 37, his music under Muslimgauze has continued to be released. He often inundated labels and collaborators with music, and consequently the latter had to be selective of what was eventually put out. Labels, including Soleilmoon and Staalplaat, continue to publish unreleased albums, as well as releases of demos, his own reworked tracks, and abandoned full-length tapes. Jones' posthumous discography is known for including many studio variations of nearly all his music.[8] [9]

In April 2014, Vinyl On Demand released Chasing the Shadow of Bryn Jones 1983–1988, a 10 LP box set reissuing early albums originally released by Product Kinematograph, Recloose Organisation, and Jones' own Limited Editions. Each LP includes bonus tracks taken from period compilation albums. The release was also accompanied by biography written by Ibrahim Khider titled Muslimgauze: Chasing the Shadow of Bryn Jones.[10]

Musical styles

Muslimgauze's music is often difficult to describe due to sheer volume, content diversity and often singular stylings; Jones never produced any hit albums or songs. However, it's possible to describe common features of his music as he tended to use many of the same strategies, modified from album to album to give each release a distinct feel or concept. The music is often heavily electronic and strongly rhythmic (sometimes including live studio percussion), though tempos can vary from very fast to slowly driving and almost ambient, making frequent use of gradually changing structures or melodic motifs. Critic Ned Raggett reviewed a number of Muslimgauze albums for Allmusic.com, noting the diverse styles of Jones's recordings: United States of Islam (1991) featured layered percussion and "a muted techno pulse",[11] Hamas Arc (1993) touched on a menacing "ambience that is not so far removed from the likes of [industrial metal acts] Godflesh or Scorn",[12] and Gun Aramaic (1996) blended atmospheric sounds and vocal samples that "almost turns the album into a soundtrack for a non-existent film."[13]

Political beliefs

Jones originally claimed Muslimgauze was formed in response to Operation Peace of the Galilee, Israel's 1982 invasion of Lebanon[14] [15] to stem attacks from Palestinian Liberation Organization guerrillas stationed in South Lebanon. This event inspired Jones to research the conflict's origins, which grew into a lifelong artistic focal point, and he became a staunch supporter of the Palestinian cause,[16] and often dedicated recordings to the Palestinian Liberation Organization or a free Palestine.[17] Jones's research further grew to encompass other conflict-ridden, predominantly Muslim countries including Afghanistan, Pakistan, Chechnya, Iran, and Iraq. He concluded that Western interests for natural resources and strategic-political gain were root causes for many of these conflicts and should Western meddling halt, said regions would stabilise.

Jones frequently netted criticism for never having visited the Middle East. He said in a 1994 interview, "I don't think you can visit an occupied land. It's the principle. Not until it's free again."[18]

References in dedications, album, and track titles suggest Jones had researched the conflict regions in the Middle East, as well as Chechnya, Kashmir, Afghanistan, India, Pakistan, and Indonesia, among others.[19] He opposed the oppression of and dedicated pieces to Tibetan Buddhists and Tamil Tigers.[20]

When asked what he would do if conflicts in the Muslim world were peaceably resolved, Jones replied his music would champion other conflict regions such as China's occupation of Tibet.

Discography

See main article: Bryn Jones discography.

Jones released over 90 original albums on 32 different record labels, creating nearly 2,000 original compositions. Many of his pieces were inspired by political facts or events. Many of his releases have been re-pressed as, after 1994, most of his albums were released in limited editions of 200–1,000.

Live performances

During the early phase of his career, Jones was known to have performed only one live show in 1986 at the V2 in s-Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands. At the behest of Bourbonese Qualk, of the Recloose label, Jones performed a half-hour set. The show consisted of Jones singing to a backing track while Simon Crab then members of Bourbonese Qualk added instrumental accompaniment. By all accounts the show went reasonably, but Jones was traumatised by the experience enough to swear off live performance until the 1990s.

Jones resumed live performance in 1995 at the behest of record store owner and DJ Simon Scott. Part of Jones's apprehension with live performance was in trying to figure out how to present the music. He concluded the best way was refrain from vocals with lyrics and instead play live percussion atop a backing track. He also did DJ sets that consisted of exclusively his own material. Contrary to his 1986 experience, Jones did enjoy doing live shows and frequently did them in his last years in diverse places such as the UK, throughout mainland Europe, and even Japan.[21] [22]

Date City Venue Event
26 April 1986[23] 's-Hertogenbosch, NetherlandsV2Artitexture
3 September 1995Edinburgh, UKWee Red Bar, Edinburgh College of ArtColor Climax organised by Blue Room (Edinburgh) & Sonora (Glasgow)
8 October 1995Leeds, UKCafe MexSunday Service
18 February 1996Leeds, UKThe DuchessSunday Service
26 May 1996Leeds, UKThe DuchessSunday Service
24 October 1996Berlin, GermanyStaalplaat Sonderangebot Festival
17 October 1996Leeds, UKLe PhonoBrainticket
22 June 1997 http://www.stubnitz.com/0/archive/details.php?id=5394Rostock, GermanyMS Stubnitz/Rostock Harbor
26 July 1997 [24] Algeciras, SpainPlaza de Toros de AlgecirasOído de los Mundos Festival
1 November 1997Leeds, UKThe DuchessTandoori Space
27 January 1998Shibuya, JapanClub Shibuya on Air West
13 June 1998 http://www.stubnitz.com/0/archive/details.php?id=1197Stockholm, SwedenMS StubnitzNursery Injection Festival
?? September 1998Normandy, FranceThe Monastery of Sound
28 October 1998Leeds, UKThe CockpitTandoori Space
2? November 1998Berlin, GermanyVolksbühneBallroom International

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Muslimgauze Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More . 2023-11-14 . AllMusic . en.
  2. Web site: Muslimgauze - Biography - AllMusic. John Bush. AllMusic. 9 December 2014.
  3. Web site: 2004-09-18 . disinformation muslimgauze . 2023-11-14 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040918032618/http://www.disinfo.com/archive/pages/dossier/id280/pg1/ . 18 September 2004.
  4. Web site: Muslimgauze in Stockholm . Sahlén . Mårten . 21 February 1999 . 7 January 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081207015423/http://home.swipnet.se/~w-30681/mg/ . 7 December 2008 . dmy-all.
  5. Bryn Jones . February 2007 . Bryn Jones Speaks . MP3 . audio . Extreme . 7 January 2009. fee required
  6. Book: Reed . S. Alexander . . 2013 . Oxford University Press . 9780199832583 . 243.
  7. News: Strauss . Neil . Bryn Jones, 38, Musician Known as Muslimgauze . The New York Times . 28 January 1999 . 16 June 2015.
  8. Kinney . Rick . 2004 . Industrial Nation interview . Industrial Nation . 20 . print . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090227084830/http://www.muslimgauze.org/articles/industrial-nation2(article).html . 27 February 2009 . dmy-all.
  9. Web site: Powne. Charles. Unreleased Muslimgauze Albums. 1999. Arabbox. 15 October 2017. 4 February 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120204190834/http://arabbox.free.fr/unreleased.html. dead.
  10. Web site: Muslimgauze 10-LP boxset on the way from Vinyl-On-Demand. 17 January 2014. FACT. 15 October 2017.
  11. Web site: United States of Islam - Muslimgauze | Songs, Reviews, Credits. AllMusic.
  12. Web site: Hamas Arc - Muslimgauze | Songs, Reviews, Credits. AllMusic.
  13. Web site: Ned. Raggett . [{{Allmusic|class=album|id=gun-aramaic-r261522/review|pure_url=yes}} Gun Aramaic review ]. AllMusic . 2010-11-11.
  14. Web site: Network News interview . Ayers . Nigel . September 1990 . Network News . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090227081302/http://www.muslimgauze.org/articles/network(article).html . 27 February 2009 . dmy-all.
  15. Web site: Impulse Interview . https://web.archive.org/web/20080215115706/http://www.muslimgauze.org/articles/impulse(article).html . dead . 2008-02-15 . Crumby . Mark . January 2000 . Manchester.
  16. Rena . Summer 1994 . Industrial Nation interview . Industrial Nation . 9 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080215115729/http://www.muslimgauze.org/articles/industrial-nation(article).html . dead . 2008-02-15 . print.
  17. Richard Gehr Village Voice (28 October 1994)
  18. Gehr . Richard . 28 October 1994 . Beyond the Veil . . print . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090227083109/http://www.muslimgauze.org/articles/veil(article).html . 27 February 2009 . dmy-all.
  19. Richard Gehr, Village Voice (28 October 1994)
  20. Web site: Muslimgauze . Khider . Ibrahim . March 2005 . Perfect Sound Forever.
  21. O'Rama . Link . 7 March 1998 . Muslimgauze: Bryn Jones Interview . AmbiEntrance . 20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090831131806/http://www.muslimgauze.org/articles/ambientrance%28article%29.html . 31 August 2009.
  22. Web site: Muslimgauze live dates. Arabbox. 15 October 2017.
  23. Web site: Bourbonese Qualk and Muslim Gauze. V2_Lab for the Unstable Media. 15 October 2017.
  24. Web site: 1997-07-01 . Noticias música indie . 2023-05-19 . MondoSonoro . es.