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Eternal Life No End (Vinyl)
Moumneh (Jerusalem In My Heart) and Oberland (Oiseaux-TempĂȘte) consolidate a long history of cross-collaboration on this debut studio album as a duo: a compelling synthesis of their respective and shared sensibilities. Blending juddering electronics with acoustic instruments like buzuk, rababa, clarineau and saxophone, peppered with Moumnehâs Arabic singing, the album is forged in outrage and lamentation over our suprematist and genocidal political present.
Morphing between the sensory and the suppressed, Radwan Ghazi Moumneh and FrĂ©dĂ©ric D. Oberlandâs debut album summons a poetic musical proclamation of transfigured reality and social amnesia. These seven tracks evolved collaboratively over two years, beginning as a series of duets that Moumneh instigated at MontrĂ©alâs Hotel2Tango studio in summer 2023. The Arabic title of Eternal Life No End translates more literally as âA dark, cursed night, like the seekers themselvesâ and the album is an outcry amidst the oceans of injustice flooding the SWANA region, haunting the lives and visions of vast populations. Like Dante and Virgil in Danteâs Inferno, Oberland and Moumnehâs compositions chart an emotional vortex, as dream-time seeps into trancelike percussion and hypnotic melodies, channeling collective urgencies that ripple through the currents of Radwanâs voice and Arabic lyrics. Oberlandâs passages of saxophone and clarineau evoke shamanic exhortations of evil, while Moumnehâs buzuk strums and swarms, often through electronic processing, with tempestuous mourning about unfolding tragedies. An array of instrumentation fleshes out the wider soundscapes: daf (a Middle Eastern
frame drum) and bongos, a modified electric rababa, shuddering bass and other synthetic filigree from Oberlandâs Buchla and Deckard's Dream synths.
âIt's a healing process in a way,â says Oberland about the work. âSince the genocide started, Iâd
had a complete artistic block and the inability to articulate what people are living throughâ explains Moumneh, who ultimately packed his instruments and gear and flew to Paris in the summer of 2024 to work on the album in earnest with his long-standing friend. The two had collaborated on multiple previous occasions, with Oberlandâs primary group Oiseaux-TempĂȘte, and through Moumneh's work as Jerusalem In My Heart and as a producer/engineer on various other projects.
Eternal Life No End builds on their abiding allyship as Oberland and Moumneh navigate energies and emotional shifts in newfound ways, merging their sensibilities and uncovering deeper resonances. âWe worked day and night together and made clear decisions collectivelyâ states Oberland, who nonetheless also took the lead in positioning Moumnehâs voice to shine through these compositionsâthere is singing on four of the albumâs seven tracks. The duo played reverse roles of a sort and ventured new creative processes, as Moumneh openly took direction from Oberland, setting aside his usual lead-producer role as steward of Jerusalem In My Heart.
âSqueal of Swineâ and âDagger Eyesâ open the album with dual gut punch, as hand percussion, low end synth tones, and ricocheting buzuk and rababa set the stage for Moumnehâs keening Arabic singing, reflecting a sea of sickness currently drowning the state of humanity. On the instrumental track âA Dream That Never Arrivedâ, a lo-fi dancehall-inflected beat anchors otherworldly melodic lines set against electroacoustic sound design in spatio-temporal displacement. Eternal Life No End is accompanied by an audio-visual essay for the electronic (and vocal) song âThe Serpentâ, assembled by Oberland and shot on Super 8mm camera in MontrĂ©al, Paris and Beirut, including footage of Gaza protests in Paris and of Oberlandâs performance at Irtijal Festivalâs 25th anniversary edition in Beirut. Lebanese graphic designer, printmaker, and calligrapher Farah Fayyad provides
talisman-like artwork of entwined serpents, similarly inspired by this centerpiece album track.
Morphing between the sensory and the suppressed, Radwan Ghazi Moumneh and FrĂ©dĂ©ric D. Oberlandâs debut album summons a poetic musical proclamation of transfigured reality and social amnesia. These seven tracks evolved collaboratively over two years, beginning as a series of duets that Moumneh instigated at MontrĂ©alâs Hotel2Tango studio in summer 2023. The Arabic title of Eternal Life No End translates more literally as âA dark, cursed night, like the seekers themselvesâ and the album is an outcry amidst the oceans of injustice flooding the SWANA region, haunting the lives and visions of vast populations. Like Dante and Virgil in Danteâs Inferno, Oberland and Moumnehâs compositions chart an emotional vortex, as dream-time seeps into trancelike percussion and hypnotic melodies, channeling collective urgencies that ripple through the currents of Radwanâs voice and Arabic lyrics. Oberlandâs passages of saxophone and clarineau evoke shamanic exhortations of evil, while Moumnehâs buzuk strums and swarms, often through electronic processing, with tempestuous mourning about unfolding tragedies. An array of instrumentation fleshes out the wider soundscapes: daf (a Middle Eastern
frame drum) and bongos, a modified electric rababa, shuddering bass and other synthetic filigree from Oberlandâs Buchla and Deckard's Dream synths.
âIt's a healing process in a way,â says Oberland about the work. âSince the genocide started, Iâd
had a complete artistic block and the inability to articulate what people are living throughâ explains Moumneh, who ultimately packed his instruments and gear and flew to Paris in the summer of 2024 to work on the album in earnest with his long-standing friend. The two had collaborated on multiple previous occasions, with Oberlandâs primary group Oiseaux-TempĂȘte, and through Moumneh's work as Jerusalem In My Heart and as a producer/engineer on various other projects.
Eternal Life No End builds on their abiding allyship as Oberland and Moumneh navigate energies and emotional shifts in newfound ways, merging their sensibilities and uncovering deeper resonances. âWe worked day and night together and made clear decisions collectivelyâ states Oberland, who nonetheless also took the lead in positioning Moumnehâs voice to shine through these compositionsâthere is singing on four of the albumâs seven tracks. The duo played reverse roles of a sort and ventured new creative processes, as Moumneh openly took direction from Oberland, setting aside his usual lead-producer role as steward of Jerusalem In My Heart.
âSqueal of Swineâ and âDagger Eyesâ open the album with dual gut punch, as hand percussion, low end synth tones, and ricocheting buzuk and rababa set the stage for Moumnehâs keening Arabic singing, reflecting a sea of sickness currently drowning the state of humanity. On the instrumental track âA Dream That Never Arrivedâ, a lo-fi dancehall-inflected beat anchors otherworldly melodic lines set against electroacoustic sound design in spatio-temporal displacement. Eternal Life No End is accompanied by an audio-visual essay for the electronic (and vocal) song âThe Serpentâ, assembled by Oberland and shot on Super 8mm camera in MontrĂ©al, Paris and Beirut, including footage of Gaza protests in Paris and of Oberlandâs performance at Irtijal Festivalâs 25th anniversary edition in Beirut. Lebanese graphic designer, printmaker, and calligrapher Farah Fayyad provides
talisman-like artwork of entwined serpents, similarly inspired by this centerpiece album track.
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Description
Moumneh (Jerusalem In My Heart) and Oberland (Oiseaux-TempĂȘte) consolidate a long history of cross-collaboration on this debut studio album as a duo: a compelling synthesis of their respective and shared sensibilities. Blending juddering electronics with acoustic instruments like buzuk, rababa, clarineau and saxophone, peppered with Moumnehâs Arabic singing, the album is forged in outrage and lamentation over our suprematist and genocidal political present.
Morphing between the sensory and the suppressed, Radwan Ghazi Moumneh and FrĂ©dĂ©ric D. Oberlandâs debut album summons a poetic musical proclamation of transfigured reality and social amnesia. These seven tracks evolved collaboratively over two years, beginning as a series of duets that Moumneh instigated at MontrĂ©alâs Hotel2Tango studio in summer 2023. The Arabic title of Eternal Life No End translates more literally as âA dark, cursed night, like the seekers themselvesâ and the album is an outcry amidst the oceans of injustice flooding the SWANA region, haunting the lives and visions of vast populations. Like Dante and Virgil in Danteâs Inferno, Oberland and Moumnehâs compositions chart an emotional vortex, as dream-time seeps into trancelike percussion and hypnotic melodies, channeling collective urgencies that ripple through the currents of Radwanâs voice and Arabic lyrics. Oberlandâs passages of saxophone and clarineau evoke shamanic exhortations of evil, while Moumnehâs buzuk strums and swarms, often through electronic processing, with tempestuous mourning about unfolding tragedies. An array of instrumentation fleshes out the wider soundscapes: daf (a Middle Eastern
frame drum) and bongos, a modified electric rababa, shuddering bass and other synthetic filigree from Oberlandâs Buchla and Deckard's Dream synths.
âIt's a healing process in a way,â says Oberland about the work. âSince the genocide started, Iâd
had a complete artistic block and the inability to articulate what people are living throughâ explains Moumneh, who ultimately packed his instruments and gear and flew to Paris in the summer of 2024 to work on the album in earnest with his long-standing friend. The two had collaborated on multiple previous occasions, with Oberlandâs primary group Oiseaux-TempĂȘte, and through Moumneh's work as Jerusalem In My Heart and as a producer/engineer on various other projects.
Eternal Life No End builds on their abiding allyship as Oberland and Moumneh navigate energies and emotional shifts in newfound ways, merging their sensibilities and uncovering deeper resonances. âWe worked day and night together and made clear decisions collectivelyâ states Oberland, who nonetheless also took the lead in positioning Moumnehâs voice to shine through these compositionsâthere is singing on four of the albumâs seven tracks. The duo played reverse roles of a sort and ventured new creative processes, as Moumneh openly took direction from Oberland, setting aside his usual lead-producer role as steward of Jerusalem In My Heart.
âSqueal of Swineâ and âDagger Eyesâ open the album with dual gut punch, as hand percussion, low end synth tones, and ricocheting buzuk and rababa set the stage for Moumnehâs keening Arabic singing, reflecting a sea of sickness currently drowning the state of humanity. On the instrumental track âA Dream That Never Arrivedâ, a lo-fi dancehall-inflected beat anchors otherworldly melodic lines set against electroacoustic sound design in spatio-temporal displacement. Eternal Life No End is accompanied by an audio-visual essay for the electronic (and vocal) song âThe Serpentâ, assembled by Oberland and shot on Super 8mm camera in MontrĂ©al, Paris and Beirut, including footage of Gaza protests in Paris and of Oberlandâs performance at Irtijal Festivalâs 25th anniversary edition in Beirut. Lebanese graphic designer, printmaker, and calligrapher Farah Fayyad provides
talisman-like artwork of entwined serpents, similarly inspired by this centerpiece album track.
Morphing between the sensory and the suppressed, Radwan Ghazi Moumneh and FrĂ©dĂ©ric D. Oberlandâs debut album summons a poetic musical proclamation of transfigured reality and social amnesia. These seven tracks evolved collaboratively over two years, beginning as a series of duets that Moumneh instigated at MontrĂ©alâs Hotel2Tango studio in summer 2023. The Arabic title of Eternal Life No End translates more literally as âA dark, cursed night, like the seekers themselvesâ and the album is an outcry amidst the oceans of injustice flooding the SWANA region, haunting the lives and visions of vast populations. Like Dante and Virgil in Danteâs Inferno, Oberland and Moumnehâs compositions chart an emotional vortex, as dream-time seeps into trancelike percussion and hypnotic melodies, channeling collective urgencies that ripple through the currents of Radwanâs voice and Arabic lyrics. Oberlandâs passages of saxophone and clarineau evoke shamanic exhortations of evil, while Moumnehâs buzuk strums and swarms, often through electronic processing, with tempestuous mourning about unfolding tragedies. An array of instrumentation fleshes out the wider soundscapes: daf (a Middle Eastern
frame drum) and bongos, a modified electric rababa, shuddering bass and other synthetic filigree from Oberlandâs Buchla and Deckard's Dream synths.
âIt's a healing process in a way,â says Oberland about the work. âSince the genocide started, Iâd
had a complete artistic block and the inability to articulate what people are living throughâ explains Moumneh, who ultimately packed his instruments and gear and flew to Paris in the summer of 2024 to work on the album in earnest with his long-standing friend. The two had collaborated on multiple previous occasions, with Oberlandâs primary group Oiseaux-TempĂȘte, and through Moumneh's work as Jerusalem In My Heart and as a producer/engineer on various other projects.
Eternal Life No End builds on their abiding allyship as Oberland and Moumneh navigate energies and emotional shifts in newfound ways, merging their sensibilities and uncovering deeper resonances. âWe worked day and night together and made clear decisions collectivelyâ states Oberland, who nonetheless also took the lead in positioning Moumnehâs voice to shine through these compositionsâthere is singing on four of the albumâs seven tracks. The duo played reverse roles of a sort and ventured new creative processes, as Moumneh openly took direction from Oberland, setting aside his usual lead-producer role as steward of Jerusalem In My Heart.
âSqueal of Swineâ and âDagger Eyesâ open the album with dual gut punch, as hand percussion, low end synth tones, and ricocheting buzuk and rababa set the stage for Moumnehâs keening Arabic singing, reflecting a sea of sickness currently drowning the state of humanity. On the instrumental track âA Dream That Never Arrivedâ, a lo-fi dancehall-inflected beat anchors otherworldly melodic lines set against electroacoustic sound design in spatio-temporal displacement. Eternal Life No End is accompanied by an audio-visual essay for the electronic (and vocal) song âThe Serpentâ, assembled by Oberland and shot on Super 8mm camera in MontrĂ©al, Paris and Beirut, including footage of Gaza protests in Paris and of Oberlandâs performance at Irtijal Festivalâs 25th anniversary edition in Beirut. Lebanese graphic designer, printmaker, and calligrapher Farah Fayyad provides
talisman-like artwork of entwined serpents, similarly inspired by this centerpiece album track.

















