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Maria Arkhipova
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Key Information
Maria Arkhipova (Russian: Мари́я Архи́пова; born 9 January 1983), known by her stage name as Masha Scream, is a Russian metal musician from Moscow. She is the founder, vocalist and main songwriter of the folk metal band Arkona.[1] She has also played in other bands such as Nargathrond.
Personal life
[edit]Arkhipova is married to fellow band member Sergei "Lazar" Atrashkevich with whom she has two children.
Discography
[edit]With Arkona
[edit]Studio albums
[edit]- Vozrozhdeniye (2004)
- Lepta (2004)
- Vo Slavu Velikim! (2005)
- Ot Serdtsa K Nebu (2007)
- Goi, Rode, Goi! (2009)
- Stenka Na Stenku (2011, EP)
- Slovo (2011)
- Yav (2014)
- Khram (2018)
- Kob' (2023)
Live albums / DVDs
[edit]- Zhizn Vo Slavu (2006)
- Noch Velesova (2009)
With Nargathrond
[edit]Studio albums
[edit]- Carnal Lust and Wolfen Hunger (2000)
- ...For We Blessed This World With Plagues (2002)
- Inevitability (2004)
Guest appearances
[edit]Arkhipova appeared as a guest vocalist on Svarga's first two albums Ogni na Kurganah and There, Where Woods Doze.... She also appeared on Ancestral Volkhves' second studio album Perun Do Vas!!![2] and on Percival (band) "Wodnik" from album Svantevit.
References
[edit]- ^ "History. Arkona – official web-site". Arkona. arkona-russia.com. Archived from the original on 10 March 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ^ Scuderi, Gustavo (2 July 2015). "Metal Chick of the Month – Masha Scream". THE HEADBANGING MOOSE. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
External links
[edit]
Media related to Masha Scream Arhipova at Wikimedia Commons
Maria Arkhipova
View on Grokipediafrom Grokipedia
Maria Arkhipova (born 9 January 1983), better known by her stage name Masha "Scream", is a Russian musician, singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist renowned as the founder, lead vocalist, keyboardist, and primary composer of the pagan folk metal band Arkona.[1][2] Born in Moscow, she has shaped the band's sound since its inception in 2002, drawing from Slavic mythology, folklore, and neopagan themes to create intense, atmospheric music that blends folk melodies with black and heavy metal aggression.[1][3] Arkhipova's versatile vocal style, encompassing guttural growls, clean singing, and choral elements, has established her as a prominent figure in the international metal scene, with Arkona achieving cult status through nine studio albums and extensive touring.[4][1]
Arkhipova's early involvement in Moscow's Slavic neopagan community "Vyatichi" inspired the band's formation; in February 2002, she co-founded Arkona alongside guitarist Alexander "Warlock" Korolyov, initially as a project called Hyperborea before settling on the name referencing the ancient Slavic fortress.[1] Following initial lineup instability, she took on the bulk of songwriting and production responsibilities, leading to the band's debut album Vozrozhdenie in 2004, which showcased raw pagan metal with authentic folk instrumentation.[1] Over the years, Arkona's style evolved from upbeat folk metal to a darker, more epic and monumental sound incorporating orchestral arrangements and complex structures, as evident in landmark releases like Goi, Rode, Goi! (2009), featuring over 40 guest musicians, and Yav (2014), emphasizing intricate guitar work and thematic depth.[1][4]
The band's ninth studio album, Kob', released on 16 June 2023 via Napalm Records, represents a conceptual exploration of human decline through ritualistic stages, marking Arkona's most ominous work to date with extended tracks and black metal influences.[3][5] Arkhipova, married to longtime bandmate and guitarist Sergey "Lazar", continues to lead Arkona amid global challenges, including their planned debut Australian tour in September 2025, which was postponed due to health issues.[2][6][7] Her contributions extend beyond Arkona to early acoustic recordings, guest appearances, and a 2025 standalone single "Сестра", underscoring her enduring influence in pagan metal.[8]
Early life
Childhood and family background
Maria Arkhipova was born on January 9, 1983, in Moscow, Russia, during the final years of the Soviet Union.[2] Growing up in the urban environment of the Russian capital, she experienced the socio-political upheavals of the late Soviet era, including the dissolution of the USSR in December 1991 when she was eight years old.[9] This period was characterized by rapid economic transitions, such as privatization and market liberalization, which led to widespread instability and a gross national product decline of about 20 percent across former Soviet states between 1989 and 1991.[10] Public information about Arkhipova's parents and siblings remains limited, with no detailed accounts available in credible sources. Her family appears to have had connections to rural areas outside Moscow, as she has described spending time in the countryside visiting ancestors' graves in village cemeteries, which exposed her to traditional Russian customs during her formative years in the 1980s and 1990s.[11] These experiences contributed to her early familiarity with elements of Russian cultural traditions. Arkhipova's upbringing occurred amid the broader cultural shifts of post-Soviet Russia, where access to diverse influences grew alongside economic challenges. While specific family stories are not publicly documented, her later reflections indicate an early interest in ancient Russian rituals and Slavic pagan elements, shaped by the folklore-rich environment of her surroundings in Moscow and beyond.[11] This foundational exposure subtly informed her worldview during adolescence.Initial musical development
Maria Arkhipova's engagement with music began in her early teens during the mid-1990s, a period marked by the growth of the Russian rock and emerging metal scenes in post-Soviet Russia. Influenced by the cultural shifts and underground movements in Moscow, she started exploring songwriting and performance as a form of personal expression. This formative phase laid the groundwork for her later work, drawing from the vibrant local music environment. Maria Arkhipova began composing music at a young age, starting to sing even before she could speak and creating her first pieces around the same time. This early inclination toward music served as a primary mode of self-expression, reflecting her independent artistic approach. By her early teens in the mid-1990s, she was actively immersed in the Russian rock and nascent metal scenes, including involvement in her initial band Krovavaya Mary, where she wrote songs and lived with other musicians in a shared apartment, which provided a catalyst for her creative pursuits.[12] At age 14, in 1997, Arkhipova produced her first amateur acoustic recordings, capturing simple yet evocative songs on basic equipment. These included tracks such as "Ob laka" (The Clouds), "Kraski Dnya" (Colours of Day), "Putnik" (The Wanderer), and "Dom, Kotorogo Net" (House That Doesn't Exist), showcasing her initial experiments with melody and lyrics. These self-recorded pieces highlight her self-reliant start in music-making, without formal training or professional support, and represent a key step in her development as a songwriter.[13] Arkhipova's early influences included the emerging pagan and folk elements within the metal genre, particularly through exposure to bands like Nokturnal Mortum and Butterfly Temple, which blended black metal with Slavic folklore. These acts, active in the late 1990s Russian underground, inspired her to incorporate pagan themes and folk motifs into her compositions, viewing them as a projection of modern pagan thought. By the late 1990s, she was participating in the Moscow underground scene through amateur recordings and local performances, honing her skills in informal settings that fostered the raw energy of the era's metal community.[14][4]Musical career
Founding and role in Arkona
Maria Arkhipova, known by her stage name Masha "Scream," founded the folk metal band Arkona in Moscow in 2002 as her personal project, serving as the sole author and creator of the band's music and lyrics.[11] Initially emerging from the local pagan community "Vyatichi," the project began with Arkhipova collaborating with Alexander "Warlock" Korolyov, but it quickly centered on her vision of blending heavy metal with Slavic pagan folklore.[15] Arkona's name draws from the ancient Slavic fortress, symbolizing resistance against Christianization, and its themes revolve around ancient rituals, mythology, and neopagan spirituality.[16] In her multifaceted role, Arkhipova handles lead vocals, keyboards, flute, tambourine, and occasional guitar, while acting as the primary songwriter and lyricist who infuses the material with poetic explorations of Slavic heritage.[16] The band's early output included the debut demo Rus', recorded in December 2002 at CDM-Records Studio in Moscow, featuring three tracks—"Kolyada," "Solntsevorot," and "Rus'"—that established its raw pagan folk metal sound. This was followed by the debut full-length album Vozrozhdenie in 2004 and Lepta in 2005, both self-released and marking Arkhipova's emergence as the band's driving creative force amid initial lineup instability.[17] By 2005, Arkona solidified a stable live lineup, enabling consistent performances and further development of its intricate fusion of folk instruments and aggressive metal riffs.[16] Throughout its evolution, Arkona experienced frequent lineup changes, with Arkhipova remaining the only constant member, ensuring continuity in its artistic direction.[11] A pivotal milestone came in 2008 when the band signed with Napalm Records, expanding its international reach and production quality.[18] This partnership facilitated key releases such as the album Goi, Rode, Goi! in 2009, which refined the band's epic storytelling through Slavic motifs, and Slav an' Roll in 2017, introducing more melodic and rock-infused elements while retaining pagan roots.[17] The 2023 album Kob', Arkona's ninth studio effort, delved into conceptual themes of humanity's self-destruction, showcasing Arkhipova's matured songwriting amid darker, atmospheric tones.[17] In recent years, Arkhipova has continued to guide Arkona's trajectory, with the band announcing its debut Australian tour, dubbed the "Southern Ritual," for September 2025 alongside Siberian folk act Nytt Land, spanning multiple cities including Canberra, Sydney, and Brisbane.[6] However, the tour was postponed in August 2025 due to a health scare affecting Nytt Land, with tickets remaining valid for rescheduled dates, some of which have been set for 2029; this highlights growing global interest in its pagan metal legacy and underscores Arkhipova's enduring role in expanding the band's live presence and cultural resonance.[19][20]Contributions to Nargathrond
Maria Arkhipova joined the Russian black metal band Nargathrond as a session vocalist around 2003, while simultaneously developing her primary project, Arkona.[21] Her primary contribution came on Nargathrond's 2004 album Inevitability (Неизбежность), where she provided lead vocals, infusing the band's gothic and black metal sound with folk-inspired melodies and harmonies drawn from her broader musical style.[22] This blend added emotional depth and passion to tracks like "Sily Vetra," distinguishing her performance as the album's standout element amid otherwise average songwriting and instrumentation.[22] The album was recorded in November and December 2004 at CDM Records Studio in Moscow, resulting in a clear production with occasional distortions that highlighted Arkhipova's versatile vocal delivery, ranging from intense soft passages to evocative folk-tinged expressions. One track, "Oblaka" (from her early acoustic recordings around age 14), was incorporated into Inevitability, demonstrating an overlap with material that would later influence her Arkona songwriting. Arkhipova departed from Nargathrond after the 2004 release to concentrate fully on Arkona, with no subsequent full involvement in the band, which entered a hiatus.[23]Guest appearances and side projects
Maria Arkhipova has extended her influence in the Russian and international metal scenes through various guest appearances and side projects, often bringing her distinctive vocal range and pagan themes to collaborations with other bands. These contributions highlight her versatility, from early acoustic explorations to recent black metal features, while maintaining a connection to folk and pagan elements consistent with her songwriting style in Arkona. One of her earliest side projects was the acoustic demo Neizbezhnost, recorded in 2000 when she was 17 years old and before founding Arkona. This self-produced work showcased her initial vocal talents in a stripped-down format, focusing on emotional ballads that foreshadowed her later folk metal inclinations. In the early 2000s, Arkhipova had minor involvement with the Russian gothic/doom metal band Slavery as a session musician and vocalist around 2000-2003, contributing to their atmospheric and philosophical sound during the band's formative years.[2][21] Arkhipova provided guest vocals on Svarga's debut album Ogni na Kurganah (2005) and their follow-up Tam, gde dremlyut lesa (translated as "There, Where Woods Doze," 2007), infusing the Russian pagan/folk metal band's tracks with her powerful, folklore-inspired delivery. Her participation helped bridge the underground pagan metal community in Russia during that era.[21] Around 2005-2006, she contributed vocals to several pagan metal tracks by the Russian band Percival, enhancing their blend of folk and heavy elements with her growls and clean singing. These appearances underscored her growing reputation as a go-to collaborator in the Slavic metal underground.[24] During the late 2000s, Arkhipova appeared on works by the Slovak pagan black metal band Ancestral Volkhves, including guest vocals on their album Perun do vas!!! (2008), where her performance added intensity to their heathen-themed compositions.[2] More recently, Arkhipova lent guest vocals to the track "Promethean Fire" on Canadian black metal band Panzerfaust's album The Suns of Perdition - Chapter II: Render Unto Eden (2020 release), delivering haunting lyrics and melodies that complemented the album's somber, atmospheric tone. This collaboration marked her continued impact on international extreme metal, even as her primary focus remained with Arkona.[25]Musical style and influences
Songwriting approach
Maria Arkhipova's songwriting for Arkona centers on themes drawn from Slavic pagan mythology, the reverence for nature, and critiques of modern societal decay, with all lyrics composed exclusively in Russian to preserve emotional authenticity and cultural depth. Her work often explores the spiritual connection to ancestral lands, the pain inflicted on the natural world by human progress, and the enduring power of ancient traditions amid contemporary alienation, as seen in songs addressing nature's suffering and the call to preserve freedom and heritage.[26][4][27] Arkhipova's songwriting has evolved significantly since the band's inception, beginning with raw, demo-style black and folk metal recordings in 2002 that emphasized primal energy and minimal production, such as the initial Rus' demo featuring unpolished pagan chants and folk motifs. By the late 2000s, following the band's signing with Napalm Records in 2008, her compositions incorporated more polished symphonic elements, including orchestral arrangements and layered keyboards, reflecting a maturation in blending epic scopes with intricate textures while retaining core pagan influences. This progression continued into the 2020s, shifting toward darker, black metal-dominant structures with reduced folk instrumentation, as evident in the conceptual album Kob (2023), which marks a deliberate move away from overt folk themes toward guitar-oriented intensity, and the standalone single "Cectpa" (2025), featuring doom-tinged riffs and introspective themes of inner torment.[27][11][12][8] In her creative process, Arkhipova handles the majority of composition solo, crafting melodies primarily on keyboard before integrating folk instruments such as the gusli for authentic Slavic resonance, driven by emotional impulses rather than routine practice. Collaboration is confined largely to band arrangements, where members contribute to refining structures after her initial concepts are established, ensuring the music remains a direct expression of personal worldview shaped by life events and global observations. Key conceptual elements include invocations of ancient runes and historical Slavic lore, exemplified in Kob, where the title derives from an old Slavic term for "spell" or "sorcery," and the album delves into a warrior ethos through its narrative of humanity's self-destructive descent, framed as a ritualistic unleashing of inner demons.[12][27][11][4]Vocal and performance techniques
Maria Arkhipova employs a dynamic vocal palette in her performances with Arkona, seamlessly blending guttural growls and harsh screams with high-pitched folk chants and melodic cleans to evoke the band's Slavic pagan themes. This versatility allows her to alternate between aggressive metal delivery and ethereal, traditional Russian melodies, as exemplified in live settings where she shifts from barbarian-like roars to bardic singing with precision.[28] As a multi-instrumentalist, Arkhipova contributes significantly beyond vocals, playing keyboards for atmospheric leads, flute for folk-infused solos, tambourine for rhythmic accents, and additional ethnic instruments like the komuz and mouth harp in both studio recordings and live sets. Her keyboard work often underpins the band's symphonic elements, while flute passages add a haunting, traditional layer to tracks rooted in Russian folklore. Arkhipova's stage presence has evolved from intimate underground gigs in Moscow starting in early 2003, where she fronted the nascent band at local festivals like Yazycheskaya Rus, to commanding international audiences at major events such as Wacken Open Air, with appearances beginning in 2012 and continuing through subsequent years. This progression reflects her growing command of crowd energy, incorporating ritualistic movements and costume elements inspired by pagan aesthetics to heighten the immersive quality of performances.[1] While direct evidence of throat singing influences from Siberian traditions is limited, Arkhipova's vocal techniques draw from broader Slavic and folk roots, adapting guttural styles to metal contexts for a raw, primal intensity in live renditions.[29]Personal life
Family and relationships
Maria Arkhipova is married to Sergei "Lazar" Atrashkevich, Arkona's longtime guitarist, with whom she shares two sons, Radimir and Bogdan. The couple, who wed in the mid-2000s, frequently collaborates on band projects, including video production and album mixing, which has contributed to the group's lineup stability following minor shifts around 2007.[11][4] Lazar's role as a core member since 2003 has helped anchor the band through its evolution, allowing Arkhipova to focus on songwriting and vocals while maintaining family priorities.[30] Arkhipova balances her intensive touring and recording schedule with parenthood by operating from a country house near Nikolskoye in the Astrakhan region, where she handles daily family responsibilities alongside creative work, such as gardening, hiking, and fishing with her children.[4][11] The family maintains a strong emphasis on privacy, sharing few personal photos or details publicly and separating their intimate life from media exposure.[11]Public persona and activism
Maria Arkhipova, performing under the stage name Masha Scream, cultivates a fierce pagan warrior archetype that defines her public image in Arkona's live shows. She typically dons traditional Russian tunics adorned with embroidered collars, layered with a wolf skin cape to evoke ancient Slavic ferocity, while wielding a hand-held Siberian drum to punctuate the ritualistic energy of performances.[31] This visual and performative style channels a shamanistic intensity, blending clean, soaring vocals with guttural growls to summon the spirit of pre-Christian heritage and warrior resilience.[31] Arkhipova's activism centers on the preservation of Slavic cultural heritage, primarily channeled through her songwriting and thematic focus on pagan folklore. Early in her career, she drew inspiration from Slavic paganism, using Arkona's music as a medium to explore and project the worldview of a pagan navigating contemporary society.[4] In interviews, she has articulated a broader ethos of safeguarding the natural and cultural world for future generations, underscoring a commitment to ancestral traditions amid modern challenges, including an anti-war stance emphasizing unity beyond nations and religions.[4][11] Arkhipova maintains a deliberately low personal profile on social media, avoiding individual accounts to prioritize privacy and family life, which influences her limited online engagement.[4] Her perspectives on politics are conveyed through lyrics rooted in pagan mythology, alongside explicit expressions of opposition to war and support for global harmony.[4]Discography
Arkona releases
Maria Arkhipova, known professionally as Masha "Scream," has been the driving creative force in Arkona's discography since the band's formation in 2002, serving as lead vocalist, keyboardist, and primary lyricist across all releases. Her compositional contributions dominate the band's output, with her writing or co-writing the majority of music and arrangements for every studio album since Vozrozhdenie onward. Arkhipova's involvement extended to production duties beginning with the 2004 album Vozrozhdenie, where she co-produced alongside the band's collaborators, and continued with co-production on the 2014 album Yav alongside longtime bandmate Sergei "Lazar" Layzerson. These efforts have shaped Arkona's signature blend of pagan folk metal, drawing from Slavic mythology and folklore.[32]Studio Albums
The following table summarizes Arkona's studio albums featuring Arkhipova's key contributions, based on official credits:| Title | Year | Contributions |
|---|---|---|
| Vozrozhdenie | 2004 | Vocals, keyboards, lyrics, composition, co-production |
| Lepta | 2004 | Vocals, keyboards, lyrics |
| Vo slavu velikim! | 2005 | Vocals, keyboards, lyrics, composition |
| Ot serdtsa k nebu | 2007 | Vocals, keyboards, lyrics, composition |
| Goi, Rode, Goi! | 2009 | Vocals, keyboards, lyrics, composition |
| Slovo | 2011 | Vocals, keyboards, lyrics, composition |
| Yav | 2014 | Vocals, keyboards, lyrics, composition, co-production |
| Khram | 2018 | Vocals, keyboards, lyrics, composition |
| Kob' | 2023 | Vocals, keyboards, lyrics, full songwriting |
