- Digital
Onsy
Baba Fen
Drowned By Locals
- Cat No: DBL46CD
- Release: 2026-05-29
- updated:
Track List
-
1. Onsy - Zabet Ekaa3 (Intro)
02:48 -
2. Onsy - Fnan (feat. BLENG & Fara7)
03:16 -
3. Onsy - Baba Fen (feat. BLENG, Fara7 & Sakt)
02:58 -
4. Onsy - Beef f Rg'eef (feat. BLENG & Fara7)
03:22 -
5. Onsy - Fantanyel (feat. illfeel)
03:19 -
6. Onsy - Blikii (feat. BLENG & illfeel)
02:15 -
7. Onsy - BlengElRas (feat. BLENG)
01:44 -
8. Onsy - Sa7raaa (feat. illfeel)
02:33 -
9. Onsy - Bucket Zaki (feat. BLENG & Fara7)
01:44 -
10. Onsy - T7kesh la2 (feat. BLENG)
01:33
24bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
For the better part of a decade, Cairo-based producer Mostafa Onsy has been the architect of the cerebral. His work, defined by intricate, wired sound design and alien dub, demanded a specific, deep-head focus from its dedicated listeners.
Baba Fen is something else entirely: a sharp turn from the complicated toward the direct and immediate. Call it pop-adjacent, if you squint—but only because density has been traded for a different kind of clarity.
Rooted in the minimal logic of trap, the record relies on heavy 808s, sparse arrangements, auto-tuned vocals, and a groove that hits without clutter. It nods to the lineage of Southside and Chasethemoney, yet reroutes that minimalism through a restless, cross-border sensibility. Remotely assembled between Cairo and Haifa with artists Fara7, Bleng, and Illfeel, the project was shaped by a loose, almost accidental workflow—vocals recorded and returned within hours, fueled by basic tools, slow internet, and whatever energy was available in the moment. This first-take urgency becomes the defining character.
From here, Baba Fen moves without a fixed map. While anchored in trap, the sound frequently drifts into Egyptian 90s pop, Mahraganat, and crystalline, chiptune-like melodies, refusing to settle into any one single mode of expression.
Mastered by Rashad Becker, the final result maintains a striking balance between its spontaneous origins and a formidable sonic weight. It captures a producer venturing beyond established boundaries, trading complexity for contact and proving that a stripped-back approach can often hit the hardest.
Baba Fen is something else entirely: a sharp turn from the complicated toward the direct and immediate. Call it pop-adjacent, if you squint—but only because density has been traded for a different kind of clarity.
Rooted in the minimal logic of trap, the record relies on heavy 808s, sparse arrangements, auto-tuned vocals, and a groove that hits without clutter. It nods to the lineage of Southside and Chasethemoney, yet reroutes that minimalism through a restless, cross-border sensibility. Remotely assembled between Cairo and Haifa with artists Fara7, Bleng, and Illfeel, the project was shaped by a loose, almost accidental workflow—vocals recorded and returned within hours, fueled by basic tools, slow internet, and whatever energy was available in the moment. This first-take urgency becomes the defining character.
From here, Baba Fen moves without a fixed map. While anchored in trap, the sound frequently drifts into Egyptian 90s pop, Mahraganat, and crystalline, chiptune-like melodies, refusing to settle into any one single mode of expression.
Mastered by Rashad Becker, the final result maintains a striking balance between its spontaneous origins and a formidable sonic weight. It captures a producer venturing beyond established boundaries, trading complexity for contact and proving that a stripped-back approach can often hit the hardest.
