![]() ![]() Here at NCS, we do tend to go overboard on bands we like, but seriously, truly, trust us on this one: Scarab is hot shit. His vocal ability is matched completely by the instrumental extravagance of his bandmates. His bestial gutturals are galvanizing at all times, and at the best of times, they open up like the roar of a desert lion in the night. While most of this music is the sonic equivalent of a jetting flame-thrower, lyrically the songs dwell not on death and destruction but on the irrepressibility of life and spirit, on the throwing off of shackles, on the power to rise above the domination of external constraints.Īnd while we’re on the subject of lyrics and the vocalization of them, Sammy Sayed gives Behemoth’s Nergal and Immolation’s Ross Dolan a run for their money. All three songs include flashes of solitary lead guitar establishing an exotic melody and passages where Scarab takes their foot off the accelerator long enough to hammer home the minor-key message of the music in ways that resonate with new power. To our Western ears, the songs that most overtly feature oriental melodies are “Ankh”, “Devourer of the Unjustified”, and the closing track, “War to End”. “Eye for Sanity” is one of the few songs on the album to feature tremolo picking, blast beats, and prominent double-bass kicks, and the result is a mordant slice of blackened death metal that will suck you into a vortex of indigo calamity. ![]() “Blinding the Masses” crashes headlong into tech-death territory, with darting changes in tempo and time signatures, staccato bursts of guitar fury, and strobing drum tones from every skin in the kit. Songs like “Valley of the Sandwalker” and “Leaders of Agony” barrel ahead with rapid chainsaw grinds and insanely fast, inventive drumming. We’ve been listening to Blinding the Masses, and let’s just say they belong in that kind of company, because this album hits like a Category 5 hurricane. This intense music reminds us of bands like Behemoth, Immolation, and Italy’s Hour of Penance, but with a marked use of oriental melodies in the riffs. That helped land them a spot on the bill at two international music festivals - With Full Force XVI 2009 in Germany, playing alongside the likes of Amon Amarth, Carcass, My Dying Bride, and Dimmu Borgir, and Dubai Desert Rock Festival 2009 in the UAE, opening for Motörhead, Opeth, Arch Enemy, and Chimaira. Not only did they record their first full-length, they also won a contest called “ United We Rock,” beating out 160 bands from other Middle-East and Pan-Arab nations. Last year was a turning point for the band. They released a three-song EP in 2007 called Valley of the Sandwalkers and recorded a debut album in 2009 called Blinding the Masses, which was released early this year in the West. Scarab is a death metal band from Cairo, Egypt, formed in 2006. So open your minds and your ears and we’ll show you what we found. We just jumped into the fast-moving current of the internet and waited to see where we’d be washed up on shore.Īnd by sheer chance, we wound up with a little bit of everything - some death metal, some oriental black metal, and some progressive/folk metal - but what we found was awesome. We didn’t do in-depth research, and we didn’t listen to dozens of bands and then selectively whittle down the group. To be clear, we’re not pretending this is some kind of authoritative survey. We found enough interesting shit that we’re dividing this post into three parts: One band today ( Scarab) and the next three over the two following days. So, we started exploring, and the path we wandered hooked us up not only with some really good Egyptian metal, but also with metal from some other North African countries - Tunisia and Morocco, to be precise. That got us to thinking (always a dangerous pastime) and we realized that we knew very damned little about Egyptian metal bands. We were over at Steff Metal‘s blog and got into a sick mixtape she had created ( here), the subject of which was music with an ancient Egyptian theme (though not played by bands from Egypt). ![]() But in a way, this post started just as impulsively as the one on July 5. None of the bands was known to us, and we didn’t actually like everything we found, but we wrote about all of it anyway - just because that’s what we heard.Ī few readers actually seemed to like the idea, and we’re desperate for approval, so we’ll do it again. But not today. Today, we’re doing something that’s a little more focused and we’re exercising a bit more judgment. Indulging in the same kind of presumptuousness that motivates people to tweet about their latest meal or the last time they washed their underwear, we just described the music we’d randomly checked out that morning - whether it was good, bad, or indifferent. ![]()
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