“The bird fights its way out of the egg. The egg is the world. Who would be born must first destroy a world.”
That famous Hermann Hesse quote from Demian is the reference point for Moroccan artist Aymane Haqqi’s social commentary on how society and the music industry try to box in or enslave free thinkers, forcing them into superficiality or silence. This idea sits at the core of his latest EP, ‘All Slaves Can Leave the Egg’.
Helmed by M!CHAEL, Don Bigg, and C4RTER, the production reflects this tension through detuned pianos and jazzy chords that leave a lot of air for Haqqi’s voice. Heavy vocal editing and pitched-down versions of himself create a shifting, almost schizophrenic effect, with beats dropping out and switching rhythm when he changes personas, creating that theme of fragmentation.
You can tell this is a collaborative, studio-driven project by the way he’s involved in the details of the production and usage of his sound in most parts. While most rap today is built for the club or the car, this EP is built for headphones. The production is detailed and cinematic, more theatrical rap than playlist fodder, running like a 17-and-a-half-minute storytelling trip. Haqqi fuses jazz rhythms with absurdist lyrics and psychedelic sounds, candid about the connection between mental health and music, rapping openly about identity, shame, and dread.
Aymane Haqqi has carved out a niche for himself in the Moroccan scene through abstract, psychedelic, jazzy rap. In previous works, like The Backstory of Galilee, he used metaphors of crucifixion and resurrection to describe his career comeback. This EP continues that prophetic, auteur-driven, controversial tone (Ra2iss), talking about how he has been blacklisted and left out of the conversation because his views are seen as too controversial.
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