There's more good news about my Eighteen Bridges article "Under the Veil." It was nominated both for a Western Magazine Award (Gold Award Best Article - Alberta/NWT) and a National Magazine Award (Society category).
The winners are revealed on June 15 and June 7, respectively. Without an announcement, the clear has got to be Eighteen Bridges, the new magazine that in just two issues garnered 10 National and 14 Western nominations. Mad props to its team for establishing such a high level of excellence so soon.
The NMAs did something really cool this year. They made every nominated piece available in PDF form. Click here to read some of the other contenders, including my two favourite Canadian stories of the year, "Age of the Algorithm" and "Blood Brothers" (which I'm up against! — eek!). Good luck to all the candidates. (Actually, my favourite of the year didn't get recognized. It was Michael Harris's "Life After Death" story, about how HIV and medicine changed gay cutlure.)
Music (Clean versions of singles in mp3 format)
Walk Like a Man (2008) | Coffee Shop Girl (2008) | Freedom is a State of Mind (2008) | D.R.E.A.M. feat KazMega (2010)
Images (please credit photographer according the each file's byline)
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A Letter Love Story (SEE Magazine, January 6. 2011)
Welcome to the Beat Laboratory: A.O.K.’s Q Without U (The Edmontonian, December 2, 2010)
Do it for love: AOK couples music with a children's book (Vue Weekly, December 1, 2010)
Nursery Rhymes (Edmonton Sun, November 26, 2010)
A.O.K. shares kids' story, rap CD at Edmonton's leva café (Edmonton Journal, November 26, 2010) [text]
A.O.K. releases children's book with rap album (Edmonton Examiner, November 24, 2010)
CBC Radio 1 interview (June 1, 2010)
AOK: Two hearts (Vue Weekly, April 28, 2010)
UGS Q&A (UGSmag.com, June 2009)
The Book, The Film, The CD: Recommended by... AOK (J Magazine, Inflight magazine of Jazeera Airways in Kuwait; Feb./Mar. 2009) Read text.
Winning a Sexy Gives Local Article on Muslim Sexuality National Audience (Canadian Arab News & Sex-Positive Journalism Awards; October 16, 2008)
AOK's album is a-okay (Intercamp, Grant MacEwan college; September 25, 2008 ) Read text.
Local Rapper is Making a Name for Himself (My Slave Lake; September 17, 2008)
The Great White North's lone voice of bling-free Lebanese rap (feature & review) (The Daily Star - Lebanon; September 8, 2008)
New Artist Spotlight: A.O.K. (Wake Your Daughter Up; August 30, 2008 )
Hustling Cats: Omar Mouallem financed his first rap album by writing a book about Amazing cats. Seriously. (SEE Magazine; July 31, 2008) Read text.
High Prairie influences rapper (South Peace News; July 16, 2008)
The Purr-fect album: Rapper AOK mixes cats and hip-hop (Edmonton Sun; June 27, 2008)
Reviews
Q Without U (2010)
Writer and rapper Assault Of Knowledge follows up his album If You Don't Buy This CD, The Terrorists Win and non-fiction book Amazing Cats with an odd combo pack that brings together his two interests. Q Without U is a children's book, illustrated by Josh Holinaty, about two letters that break up “to see other letters,” and at the back of the book is a link and code to download the 8-song album of the same name.
Separately, they're both quite good. The book uses an interesting writing style that removes “u” from all of the words containing “q” after the two letters break up, which could be a good way for young ones to expand their knowledge of words beginning with the letter Q but I would venture it might also cause confusion for the young ones old enough to read the book and see these misspelled words, and the gimmick will likely go without notice to those it's being read to. The album, on the other hand, is a collection of music about love, relationships and sex – subjects that the book's target market aren't even old enough to be grossed out about yet. Perhaps it's the perfect package for the hip hop-loving parents who get a new book for their kids and some new tunes for themselves. Or maybe potheads will find the odd spellings in the book funny while they listen to the music.
And speaking of music, it's predominantly mellow as befits the subject matter. A.O.K.'s raps are fairly smooth and relaxed, too, as he explores ground he spent only a little time on during his previous album. The only exceptions to this vibe are “Hanky Panky,” a sex rap sampling the 60s song of the same name (as recorded by Tommy James and the Shondells) with A.O.K.'s Jamaican patois in the final verse being a nice switch, and the upbeat, rock-sampling opening track “Shot on Sight.” While it's not a new concept, the book and music package adds more value to the product which should help with sales over illegal downloads, but it's just too bad A.O.K. couldn't have come up with a better integrated book and music combo. By Thomas Quinlan, Urbnet (March 2011)
If You Don't Buy This CD, the Terrorists Win (2008)
BEIRUT: Are you tired of hip-hop stars bling blingin' about their cars and commodities, grabbing their crotch as they rap about the 'hood and referring to women in a less than chivalrous manner? Then the sound of A.O.K., Assault of Knowledge, may well come as a breath of fresh Bel Air.
A.O.K., otherwise known as Omar Mouallem, looks and sounds more "boy next door" than "big bad rapper." His songs are often thought-provoking and perceptive, with a sweeter, more digestible disposition than many other of his gun brandishing, gangsta-wannabe contemporaries.
What more could be expected, really, from someone who financed his recently released debut album - the ironically titled "If you don't buy this CD the terrorists win" - by writing a book? About cats, as it were. He has also written an article about mut'ah (temporary marriages), which earned him a gong at the New York Sex-Positive Journalism Awards. How many other rappers can you think of that double as award-winning journalists? At only 22 years old, A.O.K. is indeed a man of many talents, influences and interests, and they often shine through in his music. CONTINUE READING >> By Dalila Mahdawi, The Daily Star (September 8, 2008)
AOK (or Assault of Knowledge) is an interesting study. He’s the son of a Lebanese immigrant who grew up in small town Alberta -”on the prairies is where I spent most of my days”- and funded this album by publishing a book about cats. He has a lot to talk about.
If You Don’t Buy This CD the Terrorists Win discusses serious issues, but the beats are relaxed instrumentals and soulfully sung samples. The regularity of the rhythms allows the rapping, not the beats, to push the songs forward and highlight the lyrics.
Thematically, the album is all over the place: coffee-shop girls, atrocious wars, the difficulties of making it in the music industry. AOK’s got some witty lines, and “Coffee Shop Girl” is a sweet and kind of dirty monologue to the freckled girl behind the counter; the Arabic lines are a bonus. “Hip-Hop a la mode” is equally clever but is more introspective: “I rap for any ism in the world’s prism.” “Unintelligent Redesign” is a short but intense criticism of church and state’s “poison that’s positioned to pontificate the wisdom.”
The manifesto is revealed in “You Are a God,” where the artist makes some strong statements about leaving his “born and raised Muslim” roots in favor of non-theism, realizing that “you are a god… in the end only you can save yourself.” In the same vein, the powerful “Freedom is a State of Mind” is an unblinking critique of civil freedoms and global oppression: “Freedom is the right to bear arms; freedom is the right to wear bombs, run into a temple screaming Allah O Akbar”.
If You Don’t Buy This CD the Terrorists Win is sharp in all its facets. Intelligent enough to support the serious themes, fun enough to house some bold statements. By Amalia Nickel, Abort Magazine (September 4, 2008)
Despite the uncohesiveness between tracks and spotty production, rapper(?) A.O.K.’s solo debut is pretty decent. It’s like one long joke that, at times, isn’t funny—yet you can’t help but listen. It all begins to make sense when you realize A.O.K. is from Canada. And you have to give the guy credit; he’s definitely on to something with the album title— If You Don’t Buy This CD the Terrorists Will Win. It’s marketing genius. Who really wants terrorists to win at anything (save for the terrorists themselves)? In that spirit you should go out right now and buy the album. If not for him, at least for your country. By Jason Parham, Format Magazine (August 20, 2008, Issue #48.)
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out of 5
Recorded over several years in three different cities and even more studios, If You Don't Buy This... tends to jump around a bit, but never in a bad sense. "Walk Like a Man" kick starts things with a quick, feisty beat and snappy lyrics that feature a fun little localized Fresh Prince-theme knock-off before the first chorus.
From there, the album sets off into "Tales from Planet Grolic", a droll criticism of dense gangster rap and an instant classic much like the cutsey-pie lead single "Coffee Shop Girl." A.O.K. (aka Omar Mouallem), who earns his keep as a writer, touches on flat-out serious political and religious commentary as well, namely on tracks like "Unintelligent Redesign" and "Freedom Is A State Of Mind," without ever making things sound pretentious or misplaced.
The pinnacle of hilarity here is "The Hood Samaritans Interlude," a knock on the Wu-Tang Clan's Method Man intro and the friendliest foul-mouthed exchange you'll probably ever hear. Striking a rare balance of laid back and brisk sounds with comical and intelligent lyrics, If You Don't Buy This... swings back and forth at all the right times. By Kevin Maimann, BeatRoute (August 2008 )
As would be expected from any album sporting this too-long title, Edmonton MC A.O.K. (aka Assault On Knowledge) presents his fair share of controversial topics. On “Unintelligent Redesign,” A.O.K. counters the arguments of creationists with a timely rebuttal to Ben Stein’s documentary Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed and takes the religious subject one step further on “You Are a God.” “Freedom is a State of Mind” breaks down the impossibility of true freedom, connecting the dots between a set of quotes from George W. Bush and Martin Luther King, Jr., and A.O.K. finishes off the album with a bonus track on Middle East politics over Middle East-inspired production featuring guests Cousin Moe and Spinning Truth. But it’s not all serious. With opening anthem track “Walk Like a Man,” A.O.K. shows his swagger and then on smooth “Hip Hop a la Mode,” he demonstrates his lyrical wordplay. “Miss Green” and “Coffee Shop Girl” cover two different sides of the hip-hop love ballad, while “The Hood Samaritans” is a humorous homage to Ol’ Dirty Bastard. Album highlights “Tales From Planet Grolic” and “Fake I.D.” attack the current state of hip-hop, with the former putting a unique spin on what is fast becoming an underground staple. If You Don’t Buy This CD The Terrorists Win is a refreshing release from an artist intent on providing variety within his music, and is certainly worth finding for those interested in the same. (Ill-Legitimate) By Thomas Quinlan, Exclaim! magazine (August 2008 )
Edmonton is a strange place for hip hop. You never know what to expect when someone new steps up to bat; and you probably have no idea what to expect from AOK’s debut CD, If you don’t buy this CD the terrorists win. You read the title and think it might be a revolutionary-themed album, influenced by greats like Public Enemy and KRS-One. Then you look at the cover and see a picture of AOK with his glasses on, and 64 of his friends wearing those same signature glasses pasted over every flap of the cover slip, all laughing and being quirky. It is now obvious that AOK is simply trying to make you pay attention to his CD any way he can; or at least be humourous about it. But even that isn’t quite what he’s about. The truth is that he does have something quite serious to say and to prove.
“Walk Like a Man” serves as the introduction for the whole album and presents himself as a person who stands by what he says. Of the things he says, one of his most recurring topics is his disgust for people adopting the gangster life for the sake of fashion and insecurity. While that style of life might make more sense occurring in depressed poverty stricken areas, if your from anywhere else you know that theirs a ridiculous overabundance of copycat gangsters. AOK constantly attacks this phenomenon, especially in songs like “Fake I.D.” and “Planet Grolic”.
Other topics include some personal ones, such as his cynical tale about coming-of-age sexual encounters in “Miss Green”, his angst-ridden negative opinion on religion itself in “Unintelligent Redesign”, and of course his obsession with girls in the coffee shop industry in “Coffee Shop Girls”. The most important topic though can be found in his last two songs, ”You Are A God” and “Freedom is a State of Mind”, where he declares that your beliefs, freedom, and happiness are entirely dependent on your own thinking and mind state. I believe this is where his most revolutionary and important message comes out; about how we can redefine any of the terms that both religion and political philosophy present to us in any way we want.
As an MC he keeps his rhymes simple and straightforward, and employs a flow just a notch above the average rapper. Though he does really step it up in one my favorite tracks “Hip Hop a la Mode”, employing a skillful vocabulary set. The song does have a rather trite chorus, but is an impressive song for AOK. For the most part though, he rhymes bar-for-bar in a natural everyday Canadian voice. The production sticks close to a New York approach, featuring many soulful samples and upbeat drums. All the beats bump, though none completely stand out.
I’d have to say the most impressive thing about AOK’s CD is his strongly presented no-bullshit common sense beliefs. And if this is his debut, it’s a very promising start for him and his crew; Ill-Legitimate Productions. by Shawn Lajeunesse, UGSmag.com (July 2008)
HIP HOP CANADA: Diversity is the name of the game on If You Don't Buy This CD The Terrorists Win, the debut album from Edmonton rapper A.O.K. (an acronym for Assault of Knowledge). The album starts strong with aggressive battle track “Walk Like a Man,” where A.O.K. proudly proclaims, “Fuck the intro, go right into the L.P. / Release my blue balls all over the streets...” Unfortunately, the bad-ass swagger is gone by the second verse, making for an easier transition into the oddball “Tales From Planet Grolic,” where, over minimal production of drums and keys, A.O.K. castigates the current state of hip hop from the point of view of future alien archeologists examining our Earthly recordings. He also attacks current rap trends (read: gangsta rap) with the funky “Fake I.D.”
Then there's the ballads “Miss Green,” an ode to the much older woman who taught him many great things, and “Coffee Shop Girl,” a love song for an unnamed, uhm, coffee shop girl that has cross-over appeal written all over it. Also on the smooth side, even if it is a little more uptempo, is “Hip Hop a la Mode,” a skills-flexing track about himself. A.O.K. attempts a few laughs midway through the album with an homage to Ol' Dirty Bastard on the interlude “The Hood Samaritans,” saving the controversy for the end with politics and religion discussed on “Unintelligent Redesign,” “You Are a God,” and “Freedom is a State of Mind.”
Some boast, on the pretext of whatever, necrosing pseudo-legitimity, of financing their rap (as if this word could still qualify such moronic outbursts of mythomania) by dealing and ripping off some naïve dudes. Then comes Omar "A.O.K." Mouallem, who dares show another way when he announces that he pulled off his first album, If You Don't Buy This Cd, The Terrorists Win... by selling books. His books, at that.
Right there, we feel the giant gap that's forming between the different actors of the "game". More than this, we sense the singular approach that defines Assault Of Knowledge. A most singular touch that goes beyond the promotional slogan and actually permeates the contents of these twelve titles. This collection is dense, glued together by a rootsy if not rough production style, yet made breathable by samples that range from the soulful (Walk Like A Man) to the smartly satirical (Hip Hop à La Mode) and the comically ironic (the hilarious The Hood Samaritan), without ever losing sight of an overall ethical message.
Resisting easy-and-caricatured, trite-and-overdone ways that would only fail to champion his views (views powerful and hopefully persuasive: see the very pedagogical Freedom Is A State Of Mind), this native Lebanese MC based in Edmonton, Canada has spent half his 23 years scratchin' paper, rhymin' away. And here he shares with us a personal path, in a life where his roots, elders' religion and country's history take centre stage.
One piece illustrates this perfectly: The Cedar Seed. Though quickly produced (or so to say, not produced, really), this track says more in a few measures than we would in spates of lines about this character, a fella that well deserves we lend him an ear, or two. And that we pay him further attention, for sure. Read original French text. By Manooch, L'oreille de moscou (June 2008 ) [Kindly translated by former linguist, now rising actor Manuel Sinor]
A.O.K. stands for Assault of Knowledge, and is the rappin’ moniker of 23 year old Edmonton resident Omar Mouallem. Omar’s a bit a renaissance man, working as a writer and journalist in order to pursue his love for hip hop the rest of the time. Although he isn’t the best MC in a technical sense, he’s smart and engaging and so the songs on If You Don’t Buy This CD The Terrorists Win make for an enjoyable listen. The production is decent, but Omar commands centre stage as he address topics like religious self-discovery, un-requited love for coffee girls, wigroes or his Lebanese heritage. Growing up Lebanese in High Prairie, Alberta must have provided Omar with plenty of material, but he’s a well-rounded dude that can address any number of topics. Worth checking if you’re looking for some hip hop that’s a little smarter and more thoughtful than your average rap album. By Shane Naedoo, Hero Hill (June 2008 )
The sounds of Brooklyn hip-hop seep out of A.O.K.'s debut full-length If You Don't Buy This CD the Terrorists Win. With his steady gangster-influenced flow and minimalist old school beats weaving in and out of symphonic string loops, this northern Alberta native proves he's learned a thing or two from the genre's greats. On The Hood Samaritans interlude pays direct homage to the crew as he gives listeners a satirical version of the Wu-Tang Clan's intro of Method Man. However, A.O.K. doesn't forget his roots. On his opening track, Walk Like a Man, the rapper of Lebanese immigrants makes very Canadian references as he tells his tale of how he came to be in Edmonton hip-hop. On other cuts, A.O.K. successfully switches from the satirical to the serious. On Freedom is a State of Mind, the MC and writer gives listeners something to think about with his intelligent commentary that questions the definition of freedom. By Sheena Rossiter, Edmonton Journal (June 2008)
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out of 5
Omar Mouallem has written feature articles, arts reviews, celebrity profiles, personal essays and business stories for The Globe and Mail, Huffington Post, Eighteen Bridges, up! and Westworld Alberta. He's the associate editor of Avenue magazine in Edmonton; the author of Amazing Cats; and recipient of the 2012 Best Alberta Story award.
He is currently working on his most ambitious project yet — an inter-cultural wedding — slated for June 2012 and co-produced by first-time bride Janae Jamieson.
Religion/Personal Essay Under the Veil (Eighteen Bridges)
—Winner: 2012 AMPA Showcase Awards: Best Alberta Story
—Nominated: 2012 Western Magazine Awards: Gold Best Article - Alberta/NWT
—Nominated: 2012 National Magazine Awards: Society category

Media "Cats are the new top dogs on the Internet" (Globe and Mail)
Health/Personal Journalism The ABCs of HPV (Leap)
Science Alberta Zooms Into Nanotechnology (Avenue Edmonton)
Sex Let's Talk About Sects (Vue Weekly)
—Silver winner, Features, 2008 Sex-Positive Journalism Awards)
Middle East Going back to the ‘Paris of the Middle East’ (Vue Weekly)
Music Chuck D: Fear of a Hack Planet (Vue Weekly)
Contributor
Contributor / April 28 2012
Huffington Post
Contributor / March 30 2012
Alberta Venture
Contributor / May 2012
New Trail
Contributor / Summer 2012
Eighteen Bridges
Contributor / Spring 2011
CBC Radio One
Theatre reviewer on Edmonton AM / Mar. - Dec. 2011
Westworld Alberta
Contributor / June and September 2011 / June 2012
up! Magazine
Contributor / June and July 2010 / July 2012
Vue Weekly
Film critic and regular contributor / 2006 to 2011
Exclaim!
Music critic / 2007 to 2008
OTHER: AOL Travel Canada, HipHopDx.com, Leap Magazine, Q-News, We
Editor
Bissell Centre
May 2011
Edmonton Community Foundation
2011-2012
Author
Amazing Cats: Stories of Intuition, Compassion, Mystery & Extraordinary Feats
Folklore Publishing / 2008
Q Without U: A Book and Album by A.O.K.
With illustrations by Josh Holinaty
Self-published / 2010
Rapper AOK (Assault Of Knowledge) has performed at Nextfest, Edmonton Poetry Festival, Hip Hop in the Park and Scribble Jam. His debut album, If You Don’t Buy This CD the Terrorists Win, received international acclaim from music critics, who praised it for its edginess and wit. His second book and album, Q Without U, combined children's literature with adult-oriented hip hop.
Click here to read: album reviews










