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Voice of Baceprot
Voice of Baceprot
from Wikipedia

Voice of Baceprot (Sundanese pronunciation: [ba.t͡ʃə.prot]; bah-che-prot, lit.'loudness/noise')—often abbreviated as VOB—are an Indonesian all-female rock trio formed in Garut, West Java, in 2014.[1][2][3] The group consists of Firda Marsya Kurnia (vocals and guitar), Widi Rahmawati (bass), and Euis Siti Aisyah (drums).[4] They sing in English as well as Sundanese. The word baceprot means "noisy" in Sundanese. It is meant to represent the band's musical style.

Key Information

History

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Formation

[edit]

VOB formed in the West Javan town of Singajaya, Garut, in 2014, after the members, who were school friends, were introduced to heavy metal by their counselor, who saw music as an outlet for their proactive, rebellious nature, which had gotten them in trouble with teachers.[5] They generated numerous views on YouTube with a cover of a Rage Against the Machine song in 2015. The trio continued to produce videos of cover songs by artists such as Red Hot Chili Peppers, Metallica, and Slipknot.[6][7] The band presented a seemingly contradictory image, with their heavy style of playing, in contrast to their modest Islamic attire, including the hijab, worn by all three members.[8] This has caused them to receive criticism from some conservative Muslims in their hometown of Garut.[1][9] They have also received support, however, from various quarters.[9][10]

All three women had been learning to play musical instruments at school and were encouraged by their theatre coach to sign up for band competitions. Their coach went on to become their manager as well as lyricist.[11][12]

First single and recognition

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In 2018, VOB signed a deal with Jakarta-based booking agency Amity Asia.[citation needed] Not long after, they released their debut single, "School Revolution". The single gained the band significant traction, and they received a number of invitations to perform at international music festivals.[13]

When American rock band Guns N' Roses played at the Gelora Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta in November 2018, guitarist Slash invited the trio to meet him backstage.[14]

They received further endorsements on social media from Rage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello and Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea, as well as Living Colour guitarist Vernon Reid.[15][16]

Second single and live EP

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In early 2021, VOB returned to the studio to work on "God, Allow Me (Please) to Play Music", a response to the conservative criticism they faced.[5] It was their first original single in three years. The song was released on 17 August 2021, preceded by an EP of five live tracks, titled The Other Side of Metalism (Live Session).

US tour and debut album

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In June 2023, the band announced an 11-stop US tour, beginning in August of that year.[17] They also announced the upcoming release of their debut album, entitled Retas, on 13 July 2023, via 12Wired. The band issued the first single from the album, "What's the Holy (Nobel) Today?", on 15 June.[18]

In June 2024, VOB became the first-ever Indonesian musical act to play at the Glastonbury Festival.[19]

Band members

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  • Firda Marsya Kurnia – vocals, guitar
  • Euis Siti Aisyah – drums
  • Widi Rahmawati – bass

Discography

[edit]

Albums

  • Retas (2023)

EPs

  • The Other Side of Metalism (Live Session) (2021)
  • Transisi (2025)

Singles

  • "School Revolution" (2018)
  • "God, Allow Me (Please) to Play Music" (2021)
  • "[NOT] Public Property" (2022)
  • "PMS – Perempuan Merdeka Seutuhnya" (2022)
  • "What's the Holy (Nobel) Today?" (2023)
  • "Rumah Tanah Tidak Dijual" (2024)
  • "Mighty Island" (2025)

Awards and nominations

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Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
2022 Anugerah Musik Indonesia Best Duo/Group Rock Collaboration "God Allow Me (Please) to Play Music" Won [20]
2023 "PMS" Nominated [21]
2025 28th Anugerah Musik Indonesia Best Duo/Group Rock Collaboration Transisi Nominated [22]
Best Rock Album Nominated

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Voice of Baceprot (VoB), meaning "loud voice" in the , is an Indonesian all-female heavy metal trio formed in 2014 in the rural village of Singajaya, . The band consists of vocalist and guitarist Firda Marsya Kurnia, bassist Widi Rahmawati, and drummer Euis Siti Aisyah, all practicing Muslims who perform while wearing hijabs. Their music blends thrash and punk influences with lyrics addressing , , and calls for personal autonomy, directly confronting cultural expectations in Indonesia's conservative Muslim communities. Emerging from a region where heavy music faces religious scrutiny—evidenced by early incidents such as power cuts during gigs deemed too loud for women—VoB persisted through family resistance and societal backlash, including accusations of violating Islamic prohibitions on music and public female expression. Key achievements include their 2021 single "God, Allow Me (Please) to Play Music," which garnered global attention, the release of their debut album RETAS in 2023, and subsequent independence from their label to retain creative control. Internationally, they made history as the first Indonesian band at Glastonbury Festival in 2024 and performed at Wacken Open Air, while earning recognition in Forbes' 30 Under 30 Asia and BBC's 100 Women lists for defying barriers in metal and women's empowerment.

History

Formation and early development (2014–2016)

Voice of Baceprot was formed in 2014 in , , , by three teenage Muslim girls attending a conservative : Firda Marsya Kurnia on vocals and guitar, Widi Rahmawati on bass, and Euis Siti Aisyah on drums. At the time, the members were approximately 13 to 15 years old, drawn together through their shared interest in heavy metal discovered via a music teacher's collection. The band's name derives from the Sundanese word "baceprot," meaning "noisy" or embodying a rebellious spirit, chosen to signify their intent to disrupt local and religious expectations through aggressive . Influenced by Western acts such as Metallica, Slipknot, , Megadeth, and , the group sought to counter bullying and stereotypes that restricted girls' participation in "" activities like loud , aiming to demonstrate compatibility between observant and metal's intensity. Early rehearsals occurred in modest, self-taught sessions after school, often at the or home, with the members adhering to hijabs as practicing while experimenting with instruments amid limited formal training. Their initial local performances across encountered hurdles, including equipment shortages, harassment such as rocks thrown by critics, and interference like power disruptions from religious authorities opposed to female-led metal. Despite these obstacles, the trio persisted in efforts without recorded output or wider recognition during this formative phase.

Initial releases and domestic challenges (2017–2018)

In 2017, Voice of Baceprot gained initial domestic visibility through uploads of heavy metal covers, including tracks by bands such as Slipknot and Metallica, which attracted local media attention and highlighted the trio's technical proficiency amid their hijab-wearing appearance. This online presence, combined with early live performances in , marked their transition from school-based rehearsals to public exposure, fostering recognition within Indonesia's niche metal scene. The band's debut original single, "School Revolution," was released on May 1, 2018, critiquing rigid educational structures and echoing themes from Alice Cooper's "School's Out" in a reinterpreted "re-bang" style. Produced under Bumi Musik , the track received airplay on local radio and further views, solidifying their emerging status but also amplifying scrutiny in conservative . As performances increased, the band encountered direct resistance tied to their , religious attire, and choice, with conservative elements in rural viewing heavy metal as incompatible with Islamic norms. Their school principal deemed the haram (forbidden), reflecting broader institutional pushback against participation in "noisy" or aggressive expressions. At one early gig, organizers cut power mid-performance, citing drummer Euis Siti Aisyah's volume as excessive, an act of informal that underscored causal tensions between the band's rising profile and societal expectations for modesty and . These incidents, rooted in defying patriarchal and religious conventions, limited venue access and prompted parental concerns but also fueled the trio's resolve, as their visibility directly provoked such localized opposition.

International breakthrough and viral success (2019–2021)

In 2019, Voice of Baceprot continued to build on initial international exposure from 2017 features in outlets such as NPR, which highlighted their defiance of conservative norms through heavy metal performances while adhering to Islamic dress codes. This coverage amplified online videos of their cover songs, including Metallica's "Enter Sandman" and Nirvana tracks, which drew praise from figures like Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic for their raw energy and technical skill. The band's decision to incorporate English lyrics in originals, starting with their 2018 debut single "School Revolution"—a critique of rote Indonesian schooling systems—facilitated broader appeal beyond local Sundanese audiences, positioning them for global resonance. By 2021, the trio achieved a pivotal viral surge with the release of a live EP on August 17, featuring high-octane covers of influences like Rage Against the Machine's "Killing in the Name" alongside an original track, captured during intimate sessions to showcase their live prowess. This was followed immediately by their second original single, "God, Allow Me (Please) to Play Music," a direct entreaty against religious prohibitions on female musicianship in conservative West Java, blending thrash riffs with lyrics pleading for divine permission to perform. The track's official music video, emphasizing their hijab-clad intensity, rapidly accumulated streams and views, underscoring themes of tolerance amid backlash from hardline clerics who deemed metal haram. These 2021 outputs catalyzed expanded management ties, including booking deals that paved the way for European tours, while their English-dominant catalog—contrasting Indonesia's pop-heavy mainstream—drew endorsements from metal publications for authentically fusing cultural critique with fidelity. The viral momentum, rooted in shares of their unyielding stage presence, marked a shift from domestic obscurity to tentative global footing, without compromising their artisanal, self-taught ethos.

Debut album, major tours, and global expansion (2022–2023)

In 2022, Voice of Baceprot achieved a significant international milestone by performing at Europe's largest heavy metal festival, Wacken Open Air in Germany, which drew a crowd of approximately 75,000 attendees. This appearance represented an early step in their transition from primarily viral online covers to live global performances of their evolving original material, building on prior domestic and regional shows. The band's professional trajectory advanced in 2023 with the release of their debut studio , Retas, on July 13 through the Indonesian label 12WIRED. Announced on , the featured entirely original compositions, marking a departure from their earlier cover-focused repertoire toward self-authored songs addressing personal and cultural critique. Retas, meaning "to intrude" or "to break through" in Indonesian, encapsulated the trio's philosophy of challenging societal barriers through music. To support Retas, Voice of Baceprot conducted their first North American headline tour from August 6 to August 19, 2023, spanning 11 U.S. cities including , , and New York. The tour commenced with a performance at the in Los Angeles on August 6, followed by club and venue shows that demonstrated growing international demand, with sets emphasizing tracks from the new album alongside select earlier originals. These outings, combined with prior European exposure, facilitated broader distribution of their music and fanbase growth, evidenced by increased streaming and live attendance metrics post-release. Additional 2023 performances in further solidified their global presence, including festival slots that reinforced their reputation for high-energy sets blending metal influences with Indonesian cultural elements. This period underscored the band's strategic shift to original content and international touring infrastructure, enabling sustained expansion beyond viral origins.

Recent achievements and ongoing activities (2024–present)

In June 2024, Voice of Baceprot became the first Indonesian band to perform at the , taking the West Holts Stage on June 28 with a set featuring covers of heavy metal classics that drew praise for its intensity and crowd engagement. The performance marked a milestone in their international expansion, following their 2023 album , and highlighted their ability to blend thrash influences with personal themes amid diverse festival lineups including and . Later in 2024, the band launched their inaugural Australian headline tour on , commencing in and extending to the Gold Coast, , , and , where they performed original material and engaged audiences with high-energy shows emphasizing rhythmic complexity and social messaging. The tour concluded in early , with reports noting strong attendance and the band's adaptation to international circuits while adhering to their hijab-wearing practices rooted in Islamic faith. During the Australian run, including a special appearance at SXSW Sydney on , Voice of Baceprot shared the 2024 Justin Cosby with DEVAURA, recognizing their live impact and independent trajectory after parting with their prior . The band's recognition extended to individual accolades, with vocalist and guitarist Firda Marsya Kurnia featured in BBC's 100 Women list in December 2024 for her role in challenging stereotypes through music. Voice of Baceprot as a group also appeared on Asia list in 2024, cited for their post-label independence and global performances. Into 2025, Voice of Baceprot released singles such as "Rumah Tanah Tidak Dijual" in late 2024, followed by "Put The Gun Down" and "Mighty Island" in early 2025, the latter addressing anti-gun violence themes. These culminated in their debut EP TRANSISI on May 23, 2025, compiling recent tracks under independent production to explore transitions in identity and resilience. In interviews throughout 2024 and 2025, band members reiterated a commitment to self-defined narratives of empowerment and faith over imposed interpretations, reflecting on the shift from domestic origins to sustained global engagements without compromising core principles. As of October 2025, they continue prioritizing direct fan connections via tours and releases, maintaining operational independence.

Musical style and influences

Genre classification and instrumentation

Voice of Baceprot's music is primarily classified as heavy metal, blending nu-metal aggression with elements characterized by heavy riffs, breakdowns, and rhythmic intensity. Their sound draws evident influences from Slipknot's nu-metal style and Metallica's thrash foundations, manifesting in fast-paced guitar work and percussive drive. The band employs a standard power trio instrumentation without additional effects or non-traditional elements: Firda Marsya Kurnia handles lead vocals and rhythm/, delivering the core melodic and riff-based structure; Widi Rahmawati provides bass lines with funk-inflected grooves reminiscent of ; and Euis Siti Aisyah contributes dynamic drumming that anchors the tempo and adds textural depth through varied patterns. This setup evolved from early covers of metal tracks by Slipknot and Metallica, transitioning to original compositions that maintain the trio format while incorporating Sundanese linguistic phrasing for cultural inflection, though rooted in Western metal conventions.

Lyrics, themes, and artistic philosophy

The lyrics of Voice of Baceprot frequently address personal experiences of and societal encountered during their in , , channeling frustration into messages of resilience and self-assertion. Formed in 2014 amid shared anxieties from schoolyard taunts labeling them as "noisy" for pursuing music, the band members drew from these empirical hardships to craft songs that reject victimhood in favor of proactive defiance, as evidenced by their early covers and originals emphasizing inner strength over external validation. A central theme is the defense of music's permissibility within , countering conservative interpretations deeming heavy metal by invoking and divine permission. In "God, Allow Me (Please) to Play Music," released August 17, 2021, vocalist Firda Marsya Kurnia questions toxic societal perceptions that weaponize to stifle , pleading directly to for the right to express through instrumentation despite judgments of impurity or female impropriety. This track, rooted in the band's encounters with fatwas and familial debates, underscores a of reconciling artistic pursuit with devout practice, prioritizing scriptural interpretation over cultural suppression. Female agency emerges not as imported ideological feminism but as grounded self-reliance within Islamic devotion, rejecting both patriarchal restrictions and secular narratives of perpetual oppression. Lyrics portray empowerment through skill mastery and family-backed independence, as in tracks dismantling gender-based injustice via direct confrontation rather than abstract advocacy, informed by the members' hijab-wearing adherence to faith amid metal's masculine norms. Songs like "PMS," released November 13, 2022, target discrimination empirically observed in daily life, promoting pacifism and personal sovereignty over confrontation with systemic victimhood. Artistically, the band employs bilingual lyrics in English for global reach and Sundanese (reflected in their name, meaning "" as a reclaimed slur) for cultural intimacy, fostering accessibility while embedding themes of and derived from lived causal realities rather than . This approach stems from a valuing empirical challenge-response cycles—bullying met with practice, religious doubt with theological inquiry—over performative rebellion, as articulated in interviews where they affirm music's status through persistent devotion and parental support. Their output thus prioritizes causal realism in expression: themes arise from verifiable personal trials, not imposed ideologies, enabling a metal idiom that integrates spiritual introspection with aggressive resolve.

Band members

Firda Marsya Kurnia (vocals and guitar)

![Vocalist/guitarist Firda Marsya Kurnia](./assets/Firda_Marsya_Kurnia_zangeresgitaristVoiceofBaceprotzangeres-gitarist_Voice_of_Baceprot Firda Marsya Kurnia, commonly known as Marsya, was born on June 27, 2000, in Singajaya, a rural village in Garut, West Java, Indonesia. Raised in a devout Muslim household within a conservative community, she adhered to traditional practices such as wearing the hijab from a young age. Kurnia co-founded Voice of Baceprot in 2014 at age 14 while still in school, initially facing family discouragement toward music as an impractical pursuit for girls, with her parents prioritizing domestic roles over education or artistic endeavors. Over time, she gained crucial support from her father, who advised the band to disregard human critics and focus on their passion when they considered quitting amid external pressures. Serving as the band's frontwoman, Kurnia provides lead vocals and guitar, delivering the raw intensity central to their performances, and plays a key role in shaping their material by infusing lyrics with themes of defiance against restrictive norms. Kurnia's personal resilience manifested in her determination to overcome gender-based skepticism and fundamentalist opposition in , including a rock thrown at her with a note decrying "devil's music" and broader societal expectations of early over career ambitions; she countered these through persistent self-driven practice, prioritizing internal conviction over validation from detractors.

Widi Rahmawati (bass)


Widi Rahmawati serves as the bassist for Voice of Baceprot, an all-female metal band formed in 2014 in the rural village of Singajaya, Garut Regency, West Java, Indonesia. Growing up in a conservative Muslim farming community, she and her bandmates attended madrasas and faced initial familial reservations about pursuing music, viewing it as a means of personal expression aligned with their religious devotion. Rahmawati began playing bass at age 14 with no prior metal experience, initially practicing on an acoustic guitar—once snapping a string while experimenting with slapping techniques—and later advancing through YouTube tutorials and school-provided instruments under the guidance of their counselor Ahba Erza.
Her technique emphasizes supple wrists, deft fingerwork, and swift, graceful execution, including bass slapping that produces deep, resonant frequencies capable of shaking stage monitors during live performances. Influenced heavily by , Rahmawati quickly mastered covers like System of a Down's "" within a month, adapting to the demands of metal's rhythmic complexity despite limited local resources for bass training in their area. This self-taught approach addressed the scarcity of metal instrumentation in rural , where she focused on building a solid low-end foundation to lock in with the drums, enhancing the band's overall groove and precision. In live settings, Rahmawati's bass lines have been instrumental in Voice of Baceprot's tight , providing the rhythmic anchor that allows the trio to deliver high-energy renditions of originals and covers with unified intensity. Despite online trolls questioning her skills—claiming superior bassists exist—she maintains a commitment to , stating she will "keep playing whatever they say," which has fortified the band's cohesion amid external pressures. Her from rudimentary practice to international stages underscores a deliberate emphasis on bass-driven stability, enabling dynamic shifts and maintaining momentum in the group's thrash-oriented sound without overshadowing vocal or percussive elements.

Euis Siti Aisyah (drums)

Euis Siti Aisyah, professionally known as , is the drummer for the Indonesian metal band Voice of Baceprot, born in Singajaya, , as the daughter of a . She joined the band in 2014 after her future bandmates noticed her habit of tapping on desks during class, leading to her recruitment as the percussionist. Under the guidance of their teacher Ahba Erza, Sitti developed her skills on a limited school , mastering complex scores such as System of a Down's "" within a month at age 14. Sitti's drumming technique emphasizes power and precision, often drawing comparisons to The Who's for its vigorous intensity. She incorporates self-taught methods like the "slide" technique, inspired by South African Cobus Potgieter, to simulate a double-pedal effect using a single pedal, enabling aggressive rhythms that blend metal's ferocity with rhythmic hooks. During performances, she employs dynamic motions, such as raising drumsticks high before striking the forcefully, contributing to the band's high-energy propulsion. In conservative , Sitti's loud drumming has symbolized defiance against cultural expectations of female restraint, directly resulting in backlash such as a power cut at an early gig where her percussion was deemed excessively noisy. Despite facing village and personal hardships, including tremors following her mother's death from a , she persisted, refining her approach to sustain the band's momentum amid societal taboos on women's audible presence in music. This resilience underscores her role in challenging norms through percussive dominance.

Discography

Studio albums

Retas, the debut studio album by Voice of Baceprot, was released on July 13, 2023, through the Indonesian label 12WIRED. The record comprises eight tracks, integrating earlier singles including "God, Allow Me (Please) to Play Music," "School Revolution," and "[Not] Public Property" with new compositions such as "What's the Holy (Nobel) Today?," "PMS," "Age Oriented," "The Enemy of Earth Is You," and "Kawani." This full-length effort represented a progression from the band's prior independent singles and live sessions to a polished studio production, capturing their raw energy in a cohesive format. As of October 2025, Retas remains their sole studio album.

Extended plays and singles

Voice of Baceprot's early non-album releases centered on singles that captured their raw energy and addressed personal and societal challenges, driving initial virality. Their debut single, "School Revolution"—a reimagined cover of Alice Cooper's "School's Out"—was released in 2018, with its official uploaded on April 30, 2018, quickly amassing international attention for its defiant school-uniform visuals and heavy riffing. The track's breakout success, fueled by shares on and metal forums, marked a pivotal moment in their visibility, later inspiring a EP featuring collaborations with Maas and Andre Winter on September 20, 2022. In 2018, the band followed with "God, Allow Me (Please) to Play Music," an original track pleading for divine permission to pursue music amid conservative religious opposition in Indonesia; it received an official single release on August 17, 2021. This release underscored their thematic focus on empowerment, gaining traction through YouTube streams exceeding 1.6 million. A live rendition appeared in the Shoebox Sessions EP, recorded in 2019 and featuring three tracks including "School Revolution" and originals like "Perempuan Merdeka Seutuhnya," capturing their early live intensity in a minimalist studio setting. The 2021 live EP The Other Side of Metalism compiled five cover tracks from live sessions, including a riff-heavy rendition of One Minute Silence's work, showcasing their interpretive range ahead of full-length commitments. Post their 2023 debut album, standalone singles continued, such as "PMS – Perempuan Merdeka Seutuhnya" and "[NOT] Public Property" in 2022, addressing ; "The Enemy of Earth Is You" and "What's the Holy (Nobel) Today?" in 2023, critiquing environmental and hypocritical authority; "Rumah Tanah Tidak Dijual" in 2024, protesting land issues; and 2025 releases "Mighty Island" and "Put the Gun Down," the latter responding to global conflicts. These tied into touring momentum, with "Put the Gun Down" explicitly linked to contemporaneous events. Culminating recent output, the TRANSISI EP arrived in 2025, incorporating singles like "Mighty Island," "RENEGADE SHEEP," and "Put the Gun Down," blending introspective philosophy with heavy dynamics in tracks exploring spiritual and societal transitions.

Reception and controversies

Critical and commercial reception

Voice of Baceprot's debut album Retas (2023) received widespread international praise for its technical proficiency and genre-blending innovation, with NME awarding it four out of five stars and describing it as containing "a wealth of raw, radical and revelatory anthems." Distorted Sound magazine highlighted the album's success in merging "sheer talent and drive with massive appeal," emphasizing the band's ability to deliver high-energy metal with socially charged lyrics. Publications such as The Guardian labeled them "one of metal's biggest buzz bands," while NPR noted their entry into the global spotlight for breaking conventional molds in heavy music. Metal Hammer dubbed them "the metal band the world needs right now," and The Washington Post commended their steady gain in recognition for expanding metal's boundaries. Indonesian media responses have been more varied, with some outlets hailing the band's innovation in a conservative context while noting their appeal remains niche domestically, reflected in limited mainstream chart penetration despite a dedicated local following. Live performances have drawn consistent acclaim for energy and execution, as seen in positive reviews of their inaugural U.S. tour stops, where Louder described their show as reigning "supreme." Commercially, the band has achieved measurable success in streaming and touring within metal's specialized market. On , tracks like "God, Allow Me (Please) To Play Music" have amassed over 1.6 million streams, with the band maintaining a growing international listener base. Milestones include their historic 2024 appearance as the first Indonesian act, which garnered "terrific" reviews for skill and vitality, drawing crowds at the prestigious event attended by around 200,000. Subsequent tours, including first-time headlining runs in (2024) and (2023), have sold out venues and expanded their reach, though album sales figures remain modest, aligning with the genre's limited mass-market penetration in . Endorsements from figures like of and of have bolstered visibility, contributing to independent label independence post-Retas.

Backlash from religious conservatives and societal norms

Voice of Baceprot, originating from the conservative region of where many interpret Islamic teachings as prohibiting music, faced accusations from religious conservatives that their heavy metal performances constituted haram (forbidden) activities. Local ultra-conservative groups and villagers labeled the band's loud, aggressive style as promoting deviance, with some equating it to "the devil's music" due to metal's association with Western influences and perceived satanic undertones in conservative . These objections often stemmed from doctrinal views prioritizing ritual purity and female over assessments of actual content or harm, viewing the genre's intensity as incompatible with Islamic decorum for women. Specific condemnations included expulsion from their initial Madrasah Tsanawiyah school in Singajaya, Regency, in the mid-2010s, after the headmaster declared "music is " and banned their performances. Religious conservatives further derided the trio as "hell-bound" or "women of " (pre-Islamic ignorance), emphasizing gender-specific prohibitions against women adopting "aggressive" public roles that challenge traditional subservience. bullying and anonymous phone calls urged them to cease, framing their hijab-wearing yet performative presence as immodest and disruptive to community norms. Incidents escalated to physical harassment, including rocks thrown at the band members during early rehearsals and outings, as well as vandalism targeting vocalist Marsya Kurnia's family store with notes threatening consequences for continuing. Her bedroom window was smeared with a message stating "You are pretty but you won’t live long," and she was struck by a stone wrapped in a similar threat, reflecting visceral reactions to their visibility in a patriarchal, traditionalist setting rather than substantive lyrical analysis. Such events underscored broader societal tensions in Indonesia's conservative enclaves, where female participation in "noisy" or masculine-coded arts provokes backlash prioritizing interpretive over individual agency.

Defenses and counterarguments from the band and supporters

Voice of Baceprot has countered religious criticisms by appealing directly to divine authority, asserting that can serve as a permissible medium for promoting when free of sinful content. Their 2021 single "God, Allow Me (Please) To Play " explicitly addresses from conservatives labeling them hell-bound, with lyrics decrying the weaponization of against creativity and imploring God: "If the music that I play / Is not sinful in Your eyes / Then allow me, God, please / To play music." The track, inspired by guidance from their former teacher Abah Erza Satia to bypass human detractors and seek God's judgment, underscores their view that artistic expression aligns with if it fosters and self-improvement rather than vice. Vocalist Firda Marsya Kurnia emphasized this stance in interviews, stating that "as long as approved of their music, it did not matter what their critics thought," and framing metal's intensity as compatible with Islamic calls for and resilience. The band positions their work as a tool to project a peaceful image of , challenging Western stereotypes through hijab-clad performances that highlight equality and tolerance, while transforming backlash—such as being deemed "" by school principals—into anthems like "School Revolution." Supporters reinforce these arguments by pointing to the band's sustained religious observance, including consistent hijab-wearing and adherence amid global tours, as empirical proof against claims of faith erosion or moral . Euis Siti Aisyah described opposition as fuel for perseverance, noting that naysayers "fired up our spirit" to persist through discipline and lyrical focus on over . This perspective aligns with broader rationales from music advocates that creativity in permits neutral arts absent prohibition, prioritizing outcomes like youth inspiration over presumed doctrinal clashes.

Cultural and social impact

Influence on Indonesian youth and metal scene

Voice of Baceprot's rise has notably increased female engagement in Indonesia's metal scene, particularly among youth in conservative regions. Following their viral breakthrough with the 2018 track "School Revolution," the band reported receiving direct messages from young girls inspired to form their own metal groups, demonstrating a causal link to heightened participation. This aligns with broader observations of messaging resonating with female youth, who cite VoB as for balancing religious observance with aggressive musical expression. In West Java's rural enclaves, such as where the band formed in 2014, VoB challenges entrenched conservatism by exemplifying self-determination rooted in personal faith rather than reliance on state interventions or imported ideologies. Their persistence amid local backlash— including power cuts at early gigs deemed too disruptive—has modeled resilience, encouraging youth to prioritize and skill-building in over traditional constraints. This has fostered a subtle expansion in local metal activity, integrating VoB into Indonesia's burgeoning underground circuit and prompting more inclusive festival lineups in the province. Empirical indicators remain limited to band testimonials and scene reports, underscoring VoB's role in normalizing female involvement without quantifiable surges in band formations; however, their trajectory from high school origins to national prominence has undeniably amplified youth interest in metal as a vehicle for autonomy.

Global representation of Muslim women in music

Voice of Baceprot exemplifies a rare representation of hijab-wearing Muslim women in heavy metal, directly confronting Western stereotypes of such women as passive or culturally constrained by demonstrating high-level instrumental skills and thematic rebellion against injustice. Their performances blend Islamic modesty with metal's intensity, attributing compatibility to personal agency rather than external narratives of oppression. Internationally, the band's appearances at major festivals—such as in on August 4, 2022, and in England on June 28, 2024—have elevated their visibility, marking them as the first Indonesian act and first hijabi metal band at these events. This exposure extends to their debut Australian headline tour from October 17 to November 2, 2024, across cities including and , reflecting demand in Western markets driven by viral covers like their rendition of Metallica's "" performed live at Les Transmusicales Festival in on December 4, 2021. Such milestones underscore a shift in global perceptions, with music media highlighting VoB's role in inspiring female Muslim fans in diaspora communities to pursue non-traditional genres through evident talent and cultural authenticity, independent of diversity quotas. Their trajectory evidences that proficiency in metal—rooted in rigorous practice and genre fidelity—fosters broader acceptance over identity-based .

Broader implications for gender roles and religious expression

The success of Voice of Baceprot, an all-female Indonesian metal band who maintain strict Islamic practices such as wearing the and performing daily prayers, demonstrates that adherence to traditional religious norms can coexist with high achievement in domains historically associated with male participation, such as . Their trajectory from a conservative rural background in , —where they formed in 2014 amid initial familial and communal skepticism—to international performances, including at in June 2024, underscores how religious discipline may cultivate resilience and focus, enabling women to overcome cultural barriers through personal agency rather than requiring the dismantling of faith-based structures. This model challenges prevailing narratives that portray religious conservatism, particularly in , as inherently antithetical to female empowerment or expressive pursuits, revealing instead a causal pathway where provides a framework for moral clarity and sustained effort amid opposition. Band members have articulated no inherent conflict between their devotion—rooted in Quranic principles of perseverance—and their musical ambitions, positioning their work as an extension of Islamic values like and self-improvement rather than a rejection of them. Empirical outcomes, such as their debut RETAS garnering recognition in 2023 and global tours by 2024, suggest that individual initiative within existing religious paradigms can yield excellence, countering assumptions of systemic that demand wholesale secular for . In terms of gender dynamics, Voice of Baceprot's uncompromised adherence to while dominating a marked by masculine highlights how religious expression can reinforce rather than undermine agency, fostering traits like discipline that correlate with mastery in skill-intensive fields. This aligns with causal observations that barriers in conservative contexts are navigable via targeted effort and supportive micro-environments, such as the band's eventual parental backing after proving dedication, rather than broad institutional upheaval. Their example holds replicability for women in other faith-adherent societies, from the to , where similar integrations of piety and ambition could expand opportunities without eroding cultural foundations, as evidenced by the band's sustained rise without altering core religious observances.

References

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