Karamell’s 'La Bonboniera' Is a Club-Ready Take On Cairo's Sounds
Across five tracks, the Egyptian producer deconstructs Cairo's familiar shaabi and folk sounds through heavy club distortion.
Fresh off a Spring 2026 European tour alongside Amsterdam-based Egyptian DJ/producer Disco Arabesquo, Egyptian producer Karamell has returned with the first half of his new album La Bonboniera. Far from a diluted take on shaabi, the record captures Cairo’s street-level sonic chaos, while reimagining Egyptian street and wedding music for an underground club setting.
True to its title, which translates to 'candy bowl', the project is unpredictable, vividly layered, and full of contrasting textures. But instead of artificial sweetness, Karamell fills the bowl with fractured strands of electronic shaabi, bending familiar Arab folk structures through distorted modular synths and heavy club percussion, across five tracks.
‘Ya Tahra’, featuring local artist Kassar, unpacks the psychological and cultural dislocation of moving from the delta town of Kafr El Dawar to the intensity of Cairo. It traces class tension and urban survival through a bruising, tightly coiled beat.
Meanwhile, ‘Ah Yany’ reworks a traditional falahi wedding folk sample into something sharper and more fragmented, slicing it with glitching electronic cuts while preserving its communal core. ‘Ankosh’, arguably the project’s most unrestrained moment, dives into a psychedelic electro-shaabi spiral where playful synth lines collide with a forceful low-end drive.
Taken as a whole, La Bonboniera functions as a condensed snapshot of Cairo’s sonic landscape. While it incorporates club and electronic frameworks, it never drifts into a flattened or Westernized interpretation.
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