
| Al Wahem | 19:15 |
| Al Hathayan | 04:47 |
| Al Maraya | 13:21 |
| Assarab | 08:04 |
Musicians
Raed Yassin: Synthesizers, Electronics, Vocals, Samples
Paed Conca: Clarinets, Electric Bass, Samples
Recorded and mixed by Fadi Tabbal at Tunefork Studios in Beirut, Lebanon.
Additional recordings and editing at Paed Conca’s studio in Beirut and Raed Yassin’s studio in Berlin.
Strings recorded by Raymond Khalifeh at Electra Audio Recording in Ballouneh, Lebanon.
Mastered by Mark Gergis.
All compositions by PRAED (Paed Conca & Raed Yassin).
Produced by PRAED.
Designed by Hatem Imam.
This album is a collaborative release by Annihaya and Ruptured [Beirut].
With the kind support of Kultur Stadt Bern and Swisslos – Kultur Kanton Bern.
Additional musicians
Pascal Semerdjian: Drums
Ayman Zebdawi: Drums, Darbouka and Riq
Mayssa Jallad: Vocals on "Al Wahem"
Amr Said: Keyboard on "Assarab"
Rasheed Helal: Violin
Razan Qassar: Violin
Mahdi Almahdi: Viola
Abdul Jawad Hretani: Cello
Al Wahem ("The Illusion") is the new full-length release by PRAED, the Swiss–Lebanese duo of Raed Yassin and Paed Conca. Recorded between Beirut and Berlin, the album returns to the group’s central aesthetic: a rhythm-driven weave of Egyptian shaabi, electronics, improvisation and the gritty pulse of street-level sound. Nearly twenty years into the project, PRAED have distilled their approach into four pieces that subtly shift the listener’s bearings, reordering grooves and fragments until familiar elements take on new identities.
The twenty-minute title track sets the tone. A tightly interlocking two-drum foundation from Pascal Semerdjian and Ayman Zebdawi shapes a structure that expands steadily: synth figures branch outward, clarinet and bass lines act as internal guideposts, and brief vocal calls from Yassin and guest singer Mayssa Jallad sit inside the texture rather than leading it. PRAED’s shaabi keyboard language is present, but the duo stretch it outward, building tension and movement through patient accumulation.
"Al Hathayan", at 4:47, tightens the focus. Conca’s clarinet moves between melodic arcs and clipped rhythmic gestures, threading through electronic loops that surface and disappear. Zebdawi’s percussion adds a raw, tactile quality, placing acoustic patterns and electronics in direct conversation. The piece acts as a bridge between the album’s two long-form compositions.
Side B begins with "Al Maraya", a thirteen-minute piece that relies on electronic, bass and clarinet interplay. The atmosphere nods to the breadth of PRAED Orchestra!, but remains anchored in the duo’s rhythmic foundations. Rather than building mass, the layering creates a sense of depth, as if new spaces were opening inside the groove.
The album closes with "Assarab," featuring keyboardist Amr Said. Semerdjian and Zebdawi again form a dual percussive axis, while synths hover between melody and pulse, and themes recur in widening circles rather than building vertically. The porous boundary between electronic and acoustic sources - processed clarinet mistaken for a sequencer, rhythmic figures springing from live drums - is where the album’s theme of "illusion" shows itself most clearly.
Al Wahem follows a long arc: early releases on Annihaya, a key appearance on Ruptured Sessions Vol. 5 – Live at Radio Lebanon (2013), later albums on Akuphone, and the large-scale PRAED Orchestra! documented on Morphine Records. This new Ruptured/Annihaya co-release brings the duo back to a concentrated format, reorganizing their familiar materials with renewed clarity and intent.

Photo by Tony Elieh
Founded in 2006 by Raed Yassin and Paed Conca, Praed is a band whose musical oeuvre can be described as a mixture of Arabic popular music, free jazz, and electronics. In the same year, the band made its first public appearance in Al Maslakh festival in Switzerland, immediately followed by a concert at the Irtijal festival in Beirut. Since then, the band has frequented numerous international music festivals and toured intensively world-wide, spanning the Arab world, Japan, Europe and Canada. Through these endeavors, they have created a large global network with other renowned musicians as musical collaborators. Their music is essentially multi-instrumental: Raed Yassin plays keyboards, electronics and vocals; and Paed Conca plays clarinet, electric bass and electronics.
The band’s main body of work explores the terrain of Arabic popular music (“Shaabi”) and its interconnectedness with other psychedelic and hypnotic musical genres in the world, such as free jazz, space jazz, and psychedelic rock among others. Since its inception, Praed has shown a very keen interest in Shaabi music as a medium that reflects Egyptian society’s complicated fabric. Through their research, they began to discover a strong cultural connection between these sounds and the “Mouled” music used in religious trance ceremonies. The hypnotizing psychedelic effect embedded in this genre presents similarities to other forms of popular music in the world that stimulate an atmosphere of sonic delirium.
Back to Top