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Clones & False Prophets |
RUSCD/LP 8234
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Greeting
heretics, etherics, clones and False Prophets,
Clones and False Prophets is the latest chapter in the Myth of
Badawi, which now spans 8 years and 5 albums, but anyone who has listened
to Badawis music knows that it reaches far beyond its years. Like
the heritage of its creator, Raz Mesinai, the Badawi saga bridges continents,
musical styles and spiritual faiths into something sublime.
Clones and False Prophets is easily the most varied and dynamic
Badawi release. There are elements of all four previous albums but also
some differences. Perhaps most significant is that on Clones
Raz
utilizes his increasing connection to NYCs downtown improvisational
music scene based around the nightclub Tonic by drafting the following
masters into his sonic army: Marc Ribot, Ben Perowsky, Doug Wieselman,
Shahzad Ismaily & Carolyn Honeychild Coleman.
The musicians unique improvisational personalities create opposing
ideas within each song, which ends up serving as a musical treaty between
all the ideas vying for power. So the listener, whether they be a heretic,
etheric, clone or False Prophet, hears mighty forces negotiate terms &
conditions, choose flags & uniforms, and stake their own musical territory.
Or as Raz himself states, create angles, lines and borders in what
was once a circle.
The resulting album is as complex as it is rooted. One feels the tension
beneath every note, constantly threatening to explode into violence. Occasionally
it does. From the brooding opening of its first two tracks Clones
slowly gets more intricate as its rhythms build in complexity and fervor.
The percussion and drums do something transcendent on Enter the
Tomb Raider. The players ride a wonderfully snaky guitar riff on
Atoning of the Myths. And it all explodes with Battle
Cry, which sounds like Middle East gone Krautrock. Waves Of
Conflict is the albums last great struggle and To Be Continued
ends Clones & False Prophets with the repetition of one word: confusion.
This is an album meant to be read into. This is the myth unfolding before
your very ears.

ABOUT RAZ MESINAI:
Composer, Musician, DJ and producer Raz Mesinai was born in Jerusalem in 1973 and was raised primarily in New York City.
Mesinai’s music is a unique hybrid of dance music and avant garde composition. He draws his influences from fiction, mythology, anarchist philosophy, as well as elements of alchemy and mysticism.
At the age of ten Mesinai began producing instrumental “breaks” for breakers and rappers in the early eighties. Due to frequent visits between New York City and the Middle East Mesinai developed a knowledge of both Sufi, Jewish, Algerian, Morroccon and Persian musical traditions. This combined with his self taught compositional style and his skills as an engineer and dub alchemist Mesinai developed his incomparable sound.
In 1992 Mesinai was recording his own dub tracks under the moniker “The Bedouin” or Badawi, and produced cassettes which he played on a boombox in the streets of lower Manhattan and sold to passersby. He began developing his use of the recording studio itself into a compositional tool, and produced some of his classic recordings with a 4-Track cassette and an echo chamber. While he was still a teenager, Mesinai began to make a name for himself as a DJ. Gaining a following for his seamless integration of all musical styles, he began spinning in some of New York’s most underground nightclubs, including Nylon, Mars, The RV, Save the Robots, Lime Light, Sound Lab, and The Pyramid among others. In 1992 Mesinai met veteran producer John Ward, and together they produced several recordings under the moniker Sub Dub (which are considered classics in the modern dub and so-called "Illbient" scene). During this same time Mesinai himself produced the modern dub classic Badawi Presents: Bedouin Sound Clash, featuring HoneyChild on vocals. Later came the Badawi records Jerusalem Under Fire, The Heretic of Ether and Soldier of Midian.
Meanwhile Mesinai began gaining recognition in New York City’s downtown music scene for his avant-garde percussion, piano, string, and electronic compositions. He met and was influenced by composer John Zorn, and in 2001 Zorn released Mesinai’s most abstract albums to date – Before The Law, Resurrections For Goatskin, and Cyborg Acoustics. His String Quartet for Four Turntables was commissioned and presented by the Lincoln Center Festival in 2000, and in 2001 Badawi: Soldier Of Midian (ROIR) received an award from Ars Electronica. In 2002 Mesinai performed for the second time in the Lincoln Center Festival, opening for revered Nubian musician Hamza El Din, and was a featured artist in the "Next Next Wave" portion of the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Next Wave 2002 festival. Most recently Mesinai has received commissions from The Kronos Quartet, Ethel, and Maya Beiser.
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1.
Enter The Etherics
2. Fire and Brimstone
3. Enter The Tomb Raider
4. Enter The Clones
5. Atoning Of The Myths
6. Battle Cry
7. Enter The False Prophets
8. False Dub
9. Waves Of Conflict
10. To Be Continued

Raz Mesinai: Percussion, Flute, Piano
Shahzad Ismaily: Bass
Ben Perowsky: Drums & Percussion
Marc Ribot: Guitars
Carolyn Honeychild Coleman: Vocals
Doug Wieselman: Clarinet
Carolyn Honeychild Coleman developed her unique vocal talents
toasting on the streets of NYC. She made her debut on Bedouin Sound
Clash and is returning for another chapter.
Ben Perowsky, one of New Yorks most sought after drummers, has worked
with John Cale, Roy Ayers, James Moody, Ricky Lee Jones, Pat Martino,
Mike Stern, Vernon Reid, the Lounge Lizards, Elysian Fields and Liminal.
Doug Wieselman has had a long and varied career as a clarinetist for the
likes of Lou Reed, John Zorn, Bill Frizell, Shudder to Think and John
Lurie to name a few.
Marc Ribots reputation is approaching legend status here in New
York. Longtime part of NYs underground improvisational scene, he
was a member of the Lounge Lizards and has worked on classic albums by
Tom Waits and Elvis Costello.
Shahzad Ismaily is a multi-instrumentalist, Tonic regular and member of
Greg Tates Burnt Sugar. His destructive bass guitar can be heard
on Badawi's Soldier of Midian.
OTHER ALBUMS BY BADAWI:
Jerusalem Under Fire (RUSCD/LP 8229)
Bedouin Sound Clash (RUSCD 8229)
Soldier Of Midian (RUSCD 8274)
Clones & False Prophets (RUSCD 8284)
Unit of Resistance (RUSCD 8307)
Also Check Out:
V/A Essential Dub (RSCD 9503)
Check out the limited edition 12"
Kode 9 vs Badawi - Den of Drumz b/w
Badawi vs. Juakali - Crows (RUSLP 8108)
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