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Dj Haram — Beside Myself LP vinyl cover
ExperimentalBassHouse BeatsElectro

Beside Myself LP

Label:
Hyperdub
Catalog:
HDBLP071
Format:
12inch Vinyl
Release Date:
Features:
Fern Green Coloured Vinyl

28.42

Tracklist

Walking Memory(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Remaining Ft. Dakn & Aquiles Navarro(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Fishnets Ft. Bbymutha & Sha Ray & August Fanon(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Lifelike Ft. Moor Mother & 700 Bliss(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Voyeur(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Do U Love Me Ft. Kayy Drizz(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Stenography Ft. Armand Hammer(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Idgaf Ft. Abdul Hakim Bilal(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Badass Ft. Carmen Nebula(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Loneliness Epidemic(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Sahel Ft. El Kontessa(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Distress Tolerance(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Who Needs Enemies When These Are Your Allies?(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

Deep Breath (An Ending)(Original Mix)

Dj Haram

0:00

About Release

DJ Haram's debut album “Beside Myself” is about the survival of the spirit in day to day struggle. Following on from her collaboration with Moor Mother as 700 Bliss on “Nothing to Declare”, here she is joined by a swarm of collaborators, collectively navigating pain and rage, and in occasional moments of joyful respite, mocking the strife. Haram describes herself as a “multidisciplinary propagandist, contemporary anti-authoritarian Arab, gendered labor class, god fearing atheist” who makes “anti-format, audio propaganda, anti-lifestyle, immersive sonics”. Her music attests to this, as she brings in friends and collaborators, from MC's Armand Hammer, Bbymutha, SHA RAY, Moor Mother, and Dakn, through to co-producers August Fanon, Egyptian producer El Kontessa, and Jersey Club producer Kay Drizz, trumpeter Aquiles Navarro, and guitarist Abdul Hakim Bilal. It's immediately identifiable as her work, but simultaneously unclassifiable, finding equal space in its dusty live production for Jersey Club, punk noise, Central Asian and Middle Eastern Percussion, synths, 808's and lurking, rumbling bass. Often central to this is her own performance of unflinching sorrowful verses, comparable to the poets Audrey Lorde or Ai in tone and Kim Gordon in context, examining the material and the abstract in equal measure. Her grungy futurism offers no easy resolutions, yet the drama and catharsis it presents is rarely so defiantly delivered.

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