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  #1  
Old 10-30-2008, 08:14 AM
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Metal Makes Its Mark in Iraq

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From USAToday.com
http://www.usatoday.com/life/music/2...terstitialskip
By Charles Levinson, USA TODAY
BAGHDAD — At a private dinner club on the banks of the Tigris River in Baghdad, Muthana Mani screamed threats at a wild-eyed crowd of young Iraqis.
"I'll see you die at my feet! Eternally I smash your face! Facial bones collapse as I crack your skull in half!" he roared.

Two years ago, these kinds of threats in Iraq typically came from members of al-Qaeda, or violent sectarian militias. Saturday night, they were directed at 250 Iraqi fans of heavy metal music who fearlessly donned eye shadow, anarchist pendants and black T-shirts and came out of hiding to attend Iraq's first metal concert in five years.

Throughout the two-hour show, the crowd thrashed about, a sea of sweating bodies and banging heads. They screamed obscenities and broke tables. It was a scene that would have made any American metal fan proud.

It was also another indication of just how much security has improved here. When religious extremists controlled Baghdad's neighborhoods, being a member of heavy metal's unique subculture could amount to a death sentence, says Mani, 21, the lead singer of Brutal Impact, one of the two bands that played the concert.

"If I wore a T-shirt like this one," Mani said in an interview after the show, pointing to a logo of a bleeding skull, "they'd have killed me."

During the most violent years of the war, Iraqi heavy metal fans were besieged by threats from all sides, says Aws Adnan, one of two 21-year-old engineering students who organized the show.

Sunnis accused metal fans of supporting the Mahdi Army because they wore black like members of the Shiite militia, Adnan says. Shiites, meanwhile, suspected fans of being from al-Qaeda because their unkempt goatees resembled the mustacheless beards popular among hard-line Sunni Islamists, he says.

As a result, Iraq's metal musicians practiced for hours behind closed doors. For Latif Ahmed, the long-haired drummer for both bands, the concert was a long-awaited act of revenge against the extremists that he says sent him death threats via text message, warning him to cut his hair, shave his goatee and stop playing drums.

"I just decided that I'd had enough staying home all the time, hiding all the time," said Ahmed, 22. "I decided to do this gig to say that metal exists here, and we are ready to kick some a—."

For many of the band members and fans in attendance, heavy metal has played the role of a trusted therapist during five years of war.

"The youth in Iraq are searching for some way to release their anger, their sadness, and heavy metal is the only way for them to do that," Mani said. "It's the only way for them to feel free."

Even as they recited bloodcurdling calls to violence, however, these headbangers carried a message of unity to fans. Brutal Impact is itself a testament to coexistence with two Sunnis, two Shiites and a Christian among its members.

The second band, Dog Faced Corpse, debuted their original song, Consanguinity. It is a call for brotherhood among Iraqis, explains guitarist Amin al-Jaff.

The band's name refers to apocryphal reports at the height of the killing in 2006 that militants had stitched a dog's head onto a victim's headless body.

Many of the fans at Saturday's concert were attending their first live metal show. They were too young to remember a band called Acrassicauda, which played Iraq's last live metal concert in 2003, just after the U.S. invasion. Its members later fled to Turkey.

"This is something totally new for me. It's craziness and crowded, and it makes you feel so excited," said Zeinab Qassem, a 19-year-old dentistry student in a strappy black dress that stopped well before her knees. It would be a brazen Baghdad outfit even in the best of times.

Next to Qassem stood Nadaa Haidar, a bespectacled girl in an Islamic head scarf, sporting black nail polish for the occasion. Both girls pumped their fists in the air, flaring their pinky and index finger to form devil horns, the universal metal sign, as they sang along to a cover of Metallica's hit song Nothing Else Matters. They didn't miss a beat.

"There's nothing wrong with wearing a veil and listening to metal," said Haidar, 18. "Islam doesn't like metal, but I'm not hurting anyone so it's OK."

Adnan and the concert's other organizer, Mustafa Muhana, pawned their laptop computers, a mobile phone and a bass guitar to pay for the show. They had nearly broken even from $10 ticket sales until the venue's owner approached them after the show and demanded $800 to pay for the damaged tables.

Adnan shrugged. "Anything for metal," he said.
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  #2  
Old 10-30-2008, 08:23 AM
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pity about pawning the bass!

there was a documentary on recently at some theatres around called global metal (done by the same guy that did metal, a headbangers journey),... and was very insightful to see how metal is placed in cultures like iraq, china, india and indonesia,... I for one am glad that in aussie land we have the freedom to express our beliefs,... good on them for putting on the show though, fingers crossed its a step in the right direction for all over there

I like the last quote, anything for metal!
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  #3  
Old 10-30-2008, 08:38 AM
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Exporting music is not big news, what I really want is to see an Iraq music band playing here in the US!
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Old 10-30-2008, 08:41 AM
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I saw the documentary about Acrassicauda, the DVD also had a follow up showing how things were going for them in Turkey, worth seeing. It makes me appreciate the opportunities I have to play here in the US
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Old 10-30-2008, 09:25 AM
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True metal = Rebellion

Rock on!!!
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Old 10-30-2008, 09:30 AM
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I saw the documentary about Acrassicauda, the DVD also had a follow up showing how things were going for them in Turkey, worth seeing. It makes me appreciate the opportunities I have to play here in the US
The name of that ws "Heavy Metal in Bagdad" and it's a really good film.
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Old 10-30-2008, 09:31 AM
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Thanks for the title, it was slipping my mind - must get more coffee
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  #8  
Old 10-30-2008, 09:32 AM
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that is so friggen awesome
  #9  
Old 10-30-2008, 09:40 AM
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That's awesome to hear I'm always glad to hear about breakthroughs like that

heres Dog Face Corpses myspace page
http://www.myspace.com/dogfacedcorpse

couldnt find anything on Brutal Impact though
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  #10  
Old 10-30-2008, 09:41 AM
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I'll see you die at my feet! Eternally I smash your face! Facial bones collapse as I crack your skull in half!"
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Old 10-30-2008, 10:13 AM
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Great find. I'm glad to hear that our efforts in the war are improving the life of the people that are directly effected by our decision to go to war. The real moral of the story is that Metal serves a purpose for people looking for an outlet for their aggression. And its more of a therapy then a instigator to act violently.
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Old 10-30-2008, 10:22 AM
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This makes me happy.
  #13  
Old 11-02-2008, 12:27 PM
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Good on em'
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  #14  
Old 11-02-2008, 01:29 PM
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**** YEAH!
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  #15  
Old 11-02-2008, 01:41 PM
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You can't kill the metal
The metal will live on
Punk-Rock tried to kill the metal
But they failed, as they were smite to the ground
New-wave tried to kill the metal
But they failed, as they were stricken down to the ground
Grunge tried to kill the metal Ha,hahahahaha
They failed, as they were thrown to the ground
Aargh! yeah! [x2]

[Singing]

No-one can destroy the metal
The metal will strike you down with a vicious blow
We are the vanquished foes of the metal
We tried to win for why we do not know

New-wave tried to destroy the metal, but the metal had its way
Grunge then tried to dethrone the metal, but metal was in the way
Punk-rock tried to destroy the metal, but metal was much too strong
Techno tried to defile the metal, but techno was proven wrong
Yea!

Metal!
It comes from hell!
  #16  
Old 11-02-2008, 01:52 PM
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Wow

I did two tours in Iraq, one of them in Baghdad. Although I don't believe in exporting culture to anyone, I think it is really cool that there are metal heads in Iraq.

I wish them well. I honor of them I intend to add "War Pigs" back into the set list. Seems fitting. Ironic... but fitting.
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