Band on the run - Iraqi rockers seek new home

Tue Oct 30, 2007 10:53am EDT
 
[-] Text [+]

By Mike Collett-White

LONDON (Reuters) - They are a band on the run.

Acrassicauda, which claims to be Baghdad's only heavy metal band, fled to Syria and on to Turkey to avoid the violence in Iraq and specific death threats from insurgent groups, but now the four young musicians may be forced to return home.

"We're stuck, we're lost," Marwan, at 23 the youngest member of the group, said by telephone from Istanbul where he is staying with bandmates Firas, Tony and Faisal.

He said the musicians were not welcome in Turkey, particularly since fighting has escalated between Turkish forces and Kurdish rebels near the Iraqi border, but they could not find another country willing to take them in as refugees.

"If we ever made it back to Baghdad, and we ever made it back to our families, where would we rehearse?" said Marwan, frustrated at talking about politics and personal troubles rather than tours and tracklists.

"If we go back to Baghdad now, we'll just stay at home as prisoners, not even go out to buy and packet of cigarettes.

"I live in a Shi'ite neighborhood and I'm a Sunni," he added, referring to sectarian divisions behind much of the killing. "There are gangs who deny us the simple choice of free will."

Acrassicauda, which refers to the Latin for a type of scorpion, was formed in 2001, but played only three concerts before the U.S. invasion of 2003. They played three more, facing heavy security, tiny crowds, power shortages and the odd explosion nearby.

Their story is the subject of a documentary "Heavy Metal in Baghdad", made by Canadians Eddy Moretti and Suroosh Alvi.

They are spearheading a campaign to find the band a new home and get money to them. The Web site www.heavymetalinbaghdad.com has a link through which donations can be made.

"PLAYING FOR SATAN"

The film covers a concert in 2005 in a Baghdad hotel, and portrays the violence in 2005 and 2006 during which the band's rehearsal space was destroyed by a bomb.

"We got a threat saying we are Americanized and we are playing music for Satan, blah blah blah, and we're going to get you one by one," Marwan says in the film, which premiered at the Toronto film festival and is due to be released in early 2008.

Inspired by the likes of Metallica, Slipknot and Slayer, the head-banging, drum-crashing Acrassicauda started out writing and rehearsing in a basement in Baghdad in 2001.

Bass guitarist Firas recalled how playing heavy metal under Saddam Hussein was not straightforward.  Continued...

 

Editor's Choice

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.  Slideshow 

Most Popular on Reuters

  • Articles
  • Video