1/ A Muey A Muey (A.K.J.E.) 5.12
2/ Dunya (A.K.J.E.) 2.16
3/ Fin Roh (A.K.J.E.) 7.29
4/ Nbrik (Hamadi,Mami,AKJE,Laswell) 5.46
5/ Nbrik Dub (Hamadi,Mami,AKJE,Laswell) 3.04
6/ Lahbab (Traditional) 7.52
7/ Nenzak (A.K.J.E.) 8.09
8/ Zin (A.K.J.E.) 5.53
9/ El Harb (A.K.J.E.) 5.28
Recorded at Bouaza, Casablanca 1991,1992 and at Secret Laboratory,
Basel 1992,1993
Engineering Toufiq: Fido K.
Additional production on tracks 1-5 & 9 at Greenpoint Studio, Brooklyn,
New York
Engineering on tracks 1-5 and 9: Robert Musso
Assistant on tracks 1-5 and 9: Imad Mansour
Tracks 1-5 & 9 produced by Bill Laswell and Pat Jabbar El Shaheed
Tracks 6-8 produced by Pat Jabbar El Shaheed
Material administration: Tracy McKnight
Mastered at Masterdisk by Howie Weinberg
MY. Cheb Ahmed: lead voice; Cheb Qchatar: electric & acoustic guitar, bass, voice;
El Habib El Malak: electric guitar, voice; S’Mohamed Kbirr: violin, mandolin, flutes,
voice; Omar Jar & MY. Mansour: darbuka, percussion, voice; Pat Jabbar El Shaheed:
synth, sampler, guitar noises, voice; Bill Laswell (except 6,7,8): bass, loops, sound
effects; SHABEESATION-POSSE - Bernie Worrell (4,5): Hammond organ, voice; Umar
Bin Hassan (3): voice; Fido K. (6): synth, General Check King; Abdou El Shaheed (9):
vibes; MC O-Khan Antifa (4): vox; Funbox Crew: additional drum sounds and loops.
Tracks 1, 2, 3 and 9 arranged by A.K.J.E. and Bill Laswell
Tracks 4 and 5 arranged by A.K.J.E., Bill Laswell and Bernie Worrell
Track 6, 7 and 8 arranged by A.K.J.E.
1993 - Barbarity (Switzerland), BARBARITY 005 (CD)
1995 - Rykodisc (USA), RCD 10336 (CD)
2021 - Bill Laswell Bandcamp (Bassmatter Subscription exclusive)
Antony Burnham (courtesy of Metamorphic Journeyman website)
This underground Moroccan band’s choice of name is kind of like an American band calling itself the Dead Kennedys: in a word, taboo. Aisha Kandisha is a mythological spirit who bewitches men, driving them mad and even to suicide, hence her "jarring effects". Careful Moroccans hold nights of leelas to ward off the dangerous Aisha with trance-like music and whirling dervish dances. The band takes shabee, Morocco’s pop dance music, and adds some leela-type sounds to come up with ‘Shabeesation’. For your money, you get some of the most fun and danceable exotic music I’ve heard in years. If I were getting married, I’d want this band to play for my wedding. It’s downright joyous—I actually started dancing at 8 a.m. while brushing my teeth. And believe me, folks, that is saying a lot!
PJR (review courtesy of the Napra website)
Starting in the late '80s as a traditional Shabee dance band, this Moroccan quintet became one of the few North African acts to successfully merge traditional and modern sounds and technology on their electrifying 1990 debut. In addition to haunting violins, mandolins, guitars, and mesmerizing Arabic vocals and chanting, the album utilized electronic tinkering and turntable DJing, aided by the post-production work of the Swiss producer Pat Jabbar. Their 1992 follow-up, Shabeesation, was produced by Bill Laswell (who also contributed bass), and featured appearances by Omar Ben Hassen of the Last Poets and Parliament-Funkadelic keyboardist Bernie Worrell.
Richie Unterberger (review courtesy of the All Music Guide website)