Not to swerve this great thread, but Silvum's post stuck. Thinking about industrial vs world music or ethno-X and why Muslimgauze is such. Wandered to the likes of potentially related with Jorge Reyes, Tuu, Esplendor Geometrico, and traditional Arabic and Indian music. Not so much the latter, but how can you not a little? Political or traditional sounds and instruments or electronics... Muslimgauze should have his own section in stores and personal music collections. Unto himself, but then I was thinking of albums like Sheikh Aljama. I've never gotten obsessed with Esplendor Geometrico, but I've tried many times. Sheikh Aljama is my favorite EG, but I don't think I've ever went from Muslimgauze to that album or vice versa. Why? Could we guess that EG was listening to Muslimgauze, but not that Bryn was listening to EG? They had to be familiar with each other, but did one influence the other more?
from EG's bandcamp:
SHEIKH ALJAMA, originally published only in CD by Daft Records (Belgium 1991). Recorded between 1987 and 1989 and remastered in 2014 (this version) from the original reel to reel tapes. An especially interesting period where the unique and characteristic rhytmic-industrial E.G. style, developed along the eighties, turns more minimalistic, schematic, cold and rough, with sporadic influences of arabic musics and rhythms.
SHEIKH ALJAMA is a Esplendor Geométrico classic and one of the best albums of their whole career, including their hit Sinaya. Sheikh Aljama stands out for the incorporation of sonorities, voices and percusions of arabic influence, due in great measure to Gabriel Riaza, who a few years later would leave E.G. and convert to Islam.