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AlNamrood > 10 Years of Resistance > 2018, 12" vinyl, Shaytan Productions (Limited edition, 2 colours) > Reviews
AlNamrood - 10 Years of Resistance

Celebrating 10 years of anti-religious defiance in pagan folk BM - 78%

NausikaDalazBlindaz, June 16th, 2020

In 2018, Saudi pagan black / folk metallers Al Namrood celebrated a decade of existence under extremely difficult circumstances in their native country that we in the West would find hard to imagine. Unable to play live, having to import all their instruments (and get them repaired overseas), recording clandestinely and not even being able to tell their families, relatives and friends directly about their musical activities for fear of Saudi authorities finding out: these difficulties would be enough to ensure any BM or other underground metal band in Saudi Arabia a very short life. To their credit, Al Namrood have been able to release six albums (with a seventh due for release in June 2020), two EPs, three singles and this compilation, appropriately titled "Ten Years of Resistance".

The band's style blends Middle Eastern folk instruments and musical scales and structures with powerful hard-driving thrashy BM, resulting in a very distinctive sound with surprisingly catchy tunes and strong head-banging rhythms. The acoustic folk instruments might seem a little out of tune with the BM chord structures but the fusion comes to have a quirky and eccentric charm that perhaps reflects the bizarre world Al Namrood's members live in. Vocalist Humbaba's exaggerated, clownish style of singing, just a bit on the raspy side, and not above over-acting, is something listeners either love, hate or merely tolerate (with gritted teeth perhaps) but at least the music, more restrained and concentrating on delivering crushing riff power and folk melodies, is a good contrast and counterpoint. Come to think of it, the combination of vocal buffoonery and minimal music may be just right for the kind of extreme religious fundamentalist society Al Namrood live in. The synth drumming is not especially strong but this actually benefits the guitars and folk instruments: the guitars have solid brutal crunch and the acoustic instruments seem more twangy and hypnotic without competition from an acoustic drum kit.

As the album progresses - it starts with songs from early albums like "Estorat Taghoot" and "Kitab al Awthan" - the sonic universe that Al Namrood create becomes more and more bizarre, overwhelming and bordering on hysterical and suffocating. The songs aren't especially fast due to having to accommodate native music structures and maybe as a result they don't come across as angry and aggressive as they could - but this also means listeners have to suffer the oppressive ambience the music and singing together bring for longer! I hesitate to recommend particular tracks as later tracks sound heavier and more strident than earlier ones and I'm sure if the order of the songs was rearranged the album would still come out sounding more and more brutal with each succeeding song.

The songs might be rough around the edges and awkward in their delivery, the band sometimes going for bludgeoning excess, but given their difficult situation we should be amazed as well as glad the musicians have come as far as they have, that they can celebrate ten years of being together and having a large discography as well. A strong and stubborn punk spirit is present throughout this compilation right up to and including the last song "Atbaa al-Namrood", full of the thrashiest, tinniest synth drumming, the doomiest bass droning and the shoutiest blood-curdling singing you'll ever find on Planet Earth.

Supreme anti-religious defiance indeed.