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Wind, Again

by Sary Moussa

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magoski
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magoski "And yet, O Brother—if ever I do, let the ink be blood, and let the paper be mine own skin.

One day,
we will be together again.

Do you hear me, Sister?
The flags in our hands are not warnings.
They are roses.
They are veins.
They are the maps of where our bodies fall.

And when the drones descend,
and when the Trust records,
and when the world looks away,
this moment—
our voices—
will still bloom.
sohme
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sohme No other words than a transcendent force. Moussa masterfully explores two traditions of sound in one voice. Favorite track: A Storm, a Gift.
Levrikon
Levrikon thumbnail
Levrikon My favorite albums of 2025, #13.
Incredible soundscapes that run from mournful jazz to haunting ambiance. The split between eastern and western instruments and musical modalities is really well-done and seamless.
YETI BOTTLE
YETI BOTTLE thumbnail
YETI BOTTLE Sary's second album is an expansion in every way. More instruments, more range, more beauty. Imbalance was one of the best ambient albums I have ever heard, and Mr. Moussa does it again with this new album.

Great music that is cerebral, beautiful and soothing. Thank you so much for this masterpiece, and it's a pleasure to support amazing artists, like Sary Moussa. Favorite track: A Storm, a Gift.
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White Dust 06:59
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Violence 08:19
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about

"Wind, Again" is Sary Moussa’s fourth studio album and second album on Other People. Based between France and Lebanon, Moussa returns with a riveting electro-acoustic album informed by his ever-changing relationships to space, listening, and resonance as well as his growing interest in the study of harmonics in electronic and electro-acoustic music.

Years in the making, “Wind, Again” approaches distinct musical worlds and languages by bringing together improvisations by musicians performing on Western and West Asian instruments such as the Hammond organ, clarinet, saz, and buzuk with electronic arrangements and textures. Rather than force a rapprochement of these musical worlds through the instruments, and keenly aware of the weighty sonic histories they carry, Moussa proposes another way through which they can exist together in contemporary electronic composition.

Composed of six tracks, each of which demonstrate an array of recording and processing techniques, the album generates moments of tension produced by the synthesis of textural, tonal, and harmonic encounters that Moussa calls “shadows”, which outline an impressionistic musical language, existing at the edge of familiarity. Such moments permeate tracks like “Everywhere at once” and “Violence” that open with the Hammond organ and the saz respectively and slowly reveal an expansive field of sounds that showcases each of the musicians’ characteristic performances and Moussa’s densely layered textures. It is a latent yet unrelenting tension through which the composer invokes rather than represents a collective experiential state, especially familiar to those who know his environment. In “Wind, Again” these shadows are articulations of sounds steeped in traditions they are never quite tethered to. Such articulations are implied and alluded to, they play within a musical reference without the latter explicitly existing in the recording, always teetering, never completely here nor there. Sonically and musically, the album is fueled by the cultural, social, and personal realities that Moussa was brought up and lives in.

Both personal and musical ties with the musicians who feature on the album is central to Moussa’s practice. In the title track “I will never write a song about you”, musician Julia Sabra opens with rolled piano chords, followed by Paed Conca on clarinet and Abed Kobeissy on buzuk, before Moussa’s electronic processing pieces together, lifts, and sustains the melodic direction of the track that emerged from the musicians’ separate improvisations. For Moussa: “The initial connection between the three performances was made on a track that no longer existed, the original recording was both an obstacle and necessary step for the track we hear on the record. It’s as if we were all telling different stories and I pulled on the thread that held them together”. The track, and more generally the record, is tinged with a melancholy of things lost, though it never fully succumbs to it.

“Everything inside a circle”, Moussa’s most personal track and for which he provides the only vocals on the record, harkens back to a childhood memory of listening to music with his mother in a car: “There was a sound I was looking for — a memory of a sound and how I first heard it. This track is a hybrid of that memory and what I wanted to make of it”. The track relies heavily on generative systems and perhaps embodies most the ambiguous quality of the record’s music in its refusal to be pinned down by one musical tradition or another.

“Wind, Again” is both familiar and alien, cold and warm; it pays homage to the mechanics, materials, and tactility of the instruments and converges acoustic and synthetic spaces. What anchors the sound of the album are the elements of a whole that cannot find its own idiosyncrasy and that is precisely why Moussa’s album is a tour de force

credits

released June 27, 2025

Composed and produced by Sary Moussa
Piano and Hammond organ: Julia Sabra
Clarinet: Paed Conca
Buzuk: Abed Kobeissi
Saz: Sary Moussa
Guitar: Fadi Tabbal
Drums: Pascal Semerdjian
Recorded at Tunefork studios, Beirut
Mixed by Fadi Tabbal and Sary Moussa at Tunefork studios, Beirut
Mastered by Patrick Higgins at Future-Past Studios, NY
Artwork & design by Maziyar Pahlevan

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Sary Moussa Beirut, Lebanon

Sary Moussa is an electronic musician who has been active in the Beirut underground scene since 2008. His work ranges from drone-driven music to dance floor electronica with a focus on generative sound design and sonic textures.

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