Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ukrainian death metal band growls against Russia's war

EUR -
AED 4.265142
AFN 73.7474
ALL 94.825822
AMD 427.629306
ANG 2.079324
AOA 1065.557779
ARS 1668.614586
AUD 1.645073
AWG 2.09047
AZN 1.977295
BAM 1.957118
BBD 2.340276
BDT 142.637302
BGN 1.963742
BHD 0.437959
BIF 3473.66439
BMD 1.161372
BND 1.488603
BOB 8.058428
BRL 5.909409
BSD 1.161983
BTN 109.81997
BWP 15.569487
BYN 3.216967
BYR 22762.896035
BZD 2.336974
CAD 1.625828
CDF 2694.383627
CHF 0.919339
CLF 0.026137
CLP 1028.697358
CNY 7.847915
CNH 7.847421
COP 3988.918801
CRC 529.256483
CUC 1.161372
CUP 30.776365
CVE 110.736504
CZK 24.147479
DJF 206.399115
DKK 7.474772
DOP 68.060081
DZD 154.322586
EGP 58.358025
ERN 17.420584
ETB 183.932293
FJD 2.59416
FKP 0.865076
GBP 0.865158
GEL 3.071852
GGP 0.865076
GHS 13.121687
GIP 0.865076
GMD 84.780141
GNF 10193.944601
GTQ 8.857042
GYD 243.063716
HKD 9.097383
HNL 31.011221
HRK 7.534744
HTG 151.752213
HUF 349.335541
IDR 20597.517481
ILS 3.390025
IMP 0.865076
INR 109.674158
IQD 1521.397643
IRR 1596886.839259
ISK 144.40533
JEP 0.865076
JMD 183.773782
JOD 0.823454
JPY 186.187742
KES 150.509241
KGS 101.561907
KHR 4660.009706
KMF 493.582785
KPW 1045.235429
KRW 1755.901781
KWD 0.357923
KYD 0.968352
KZT 566.656795
LAK 25585.030902
LBP 104000.884285
LKR 389.27555
LRD 211.543873
LSL 18.81368
LTL 3.42923
LVL 0.702503
LYD 7.403777
MAD 10.736917
MDL 20.276657
MGA 4877.76365
MKD 61.653348
MMK 2438.186534
MNT 4153.722136
MOP 9.375115
MRU 46.548091
MUR 54.735926
MVR 17.954508
MWK 2016.141924
MXN 19.979201
MYR 4.721905
MZN 74.208509
NAD 18.80873
NGN 1577.503424
NIO 42.518111
NOK 10.996395
NPR 175.710838
NZD 1.995226
OMR 0.446549
PAB 1.161983
PEN 3.963195
PGK 5.095811
PHP 70.09115
PKR 323.21364
PLN 4.237731
PYG 7090.776019
QAR 4.227982
RON 5.23256
RSD 117.38107
RUB 84.200238
RWF 1728.121903
SAR 4.357346
SBD 9.362314
SCR 16.392443
SDG 697.418767
SEK 10.864399
SGD 1.488636
SHP 0.867082
SLE 28.744096
SLL 24353.399583
SOS 663.722162
SRD 43.356369
STD 24038.060706
STN 24.853366
SVC 10.166936
SYP 128.368911
SZL 18.811087
THB 37.782346
TJS 10.771455
TMT 4.076417
TND 3.381626
TOP 2.796306
TRY 53.789339
TTD 7.893317
TWD 36.648281
TZS 3051.509058
UAH 52.0398
UGX 4298.895537
USD 1.161372
UYU 46.912002
UZS 13942.273293
VES 692.220136
VND 30567.317533
VUV 138.048782
WST 3.183573
XAF 656.39912
XAG 0.016508
XAU 0.000268
XCD 3.138666
XCG 2.094193
XDR 0.817255
XOF 656.175448
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.132485
ZAR 18.798205
ZMK 10453.740845
ZMW 20.537833
ZWL 373.96139
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    62.87

    0%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    23.82

    -0.92%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    22.26

    -0.27%

  • NGG

    0.7100

    82.28

    +0.86%

  • BCC

    -0.0300

    71.56

    -0.04%

  • RIO

    -0.1500

    105.74

    -0.14%

  • GSK

    -0.0100

    52.22

    -0.02%

  • CMSC

    0.0250

    22.365

    +0.11%

  • RYCEF

    0.4800

    18.59

    +2.58%

  • BTI

    0.3200

    61.38

    +0.52%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.81

    +0.23%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    32.8

    -0.12%

  • BP

    -0.4400

    41.15

    -1.07%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    14.89

    -0.74%

  • AZN

    1.4400

    178.71

    +0.81%

Ukrainian death metal band growls against Russia's war
Ukrainian death metal band growls against Russia's war / Photo: Sergei GAPON - AFP

Ukrainian death metal band growls against Russia's war

A singer emerges from the grave, his beard covered in mud, head bowed and fist raised as he extends a Ukrainian flag towards the audience: this is his entrance onstage.

Text size:

Around him, in a concert hall in Warsaw, a shrill guitar tremor rises and falls whilst the drums unleash a barrage of semiquaver notes.

Finally, clad in a costume resembling a butcher's tunic, Dmytro Ternushchak releases guttural, growling death-metal vocals, and proclaims, in English: "One day, the Empire will fall."

Going by the stage name Dmytro Kumar, he is the frontman of 1914, one of the best-known Ukrainian metal bands.

But their career has been upended by Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The band cancelled a tour in 2023 because they did not have permission to leave Ukraine, required for men aged 23-60.

Having finally obtained the necessary authorisation, 1914 began their first proper tour in six years in Poland, and their political message is amplified.

For Mykyta Dokiychuk, 15, this was his first metal concert.

His family fled Ukraine at the start of the full-scale Russian invasion.

"I love this genre, it fires me up," said the long-haired, bespectacled teenager. He accused Russia, ravaging Ukraine, of seeking to "destroy the Ukrainian people".

During the concert, Dokiychuk moved gingerly. Next to him, a man performed a majestic display of headbanging, his hair flying back and forth to the rhythm like windscreen wipers.

"It's important that we... stand against these imperial ambitions of Russia," said Mikolaj Boratynski, 33, a Polish concertgoer with a thin moustache.

The chorus of his favourite 1914 song encourages people to smash the Russian aggressor.

"It is important for art to address these issues, not just love and beer," agreed Katsiaryna Mankevich, stage name Nokt, a 37-year-old Belarusian who lived under occupation near the Ukrainian capital Kyiv until 2022 before fleeing to Poland.

Herself a metal band singer, she was one of the few women in the audience.

- 'Aberration' -

Kumar, 43, founded the group in 2014, at the beginning of the war between Kyiv and Moscow-backed separatists, in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv.

A former journalist, he spoke to AFP before the show, talking of his love for Polish punk and his loathing of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Kumar's band is dedicated to the First World War. The five members dress as soldiers of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, which, in 1914, controlled the historical region of Galicia where Lviv is located.

Across their four albums, 1914 recreate the horror of World War I. Their tracks are interspersed with poignant period music and film excerpts.

On stage, Kumar either stands still or frantically paces around, clutching his face like a demon or a man in tears.

His lyrics are based on thorough historical research.

He joked that he practised "necrophilia, or as they call it, history".

Kumar said his anthropological obsession was to understand "aberration", how humans revert back to their primal instinct and engage in "its most vulgar form of aggression": war.

- 'Strong Ukrainian spirit' -

Ukrainian soldiers have worn 1914 merchandise whilst attacking on the front line, and have used the band's tracks in videos showing strikes on Russian troops.

Kumar said he was "shocked" when he found this out. But if his music can inspire Ukrainian soldiers, then "well damn, that means I did something useful".

He himself cannot enlist into the army, having had surgery for cancer that still requires him to take medication.

Kumar feels "ashamed" of not being able to fight, he said. He currently refuses to tour in Ukraine, saying he does not have the right to perform in front of people who have truly experienced the trenches.

Like other bands, 1914 are raising money for the Ukrainian army. Kumar is attempting to "open the eyes" of Europeans to the Kremlin's warmongering, showing that Ukraine was the continent's "eastern shield", he said.

Their latest album, "Viribus Unitis", follows the story of a Ukrainian from Galicia in their fight, notably against Russia, in World War I.

At the Warsaw gig, several cries of "Glory to Ukraine" rang out, along with chants against the Russian troops.

Mykyta Dokiychuk cracked a smile.

During the concert, he felt a "strong Ukrainian spirit".

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)