Medan, Indonesia – The Indonesian feminine steel band Voice of Baceprot are apprehensive about their upcoming efficiency at Glastonbury within the west of England, however not as a result of they’ll be taking part in in entrance of 1000’s in one of many world’s greatest music festivals.
As an alternative, they’re fascinated with the climate and what they may eat.
The trio, made up of 24-year-old vocalist and guitarist Firda “Marsya” Kurnia, 24-year-old drummer Euis “Siti” Aisyah and 23-year-old bassist Widi Rahmawati, have by no means been to the UK earlier than, and have been watching YouTube movies of the pageant to arrange themselves.
“We’ve got heard that it rains lots in England and, even when it’s not raining, it’s at all times drizzling,” Siti says, wanting pained.
They’re additionally, she says with a grimace, “involved in regards to the meals”.
Voice of Baceprot (VOB), which suggests “noisy” in Sundanese – a language spoken by about 15 p.c of Indonesia’s 270 million folks – would be the first Indonesian band to carry out at Glastonbury, which will get below method this week.
For Siti it was the band’s “greatest dream” and a shock when the supply first appeared through e-mail again in March.
“We thought that we must play different, smaller venues first, however we received the gig right away,” Marsya mentioned. “We’re so excited.”
VOB was based in 2014 in Garut Regency, a conservative area of West Java province, when the trio joined an extracurricular theatre group at college. Based on Marsya, their performing was “horrible” and, in an effort to bolster the ladies’ spirits, their instructor prompt they fight music as an alternative.
On the age of 14, the ladies picked up their devices for the primary time and commenced to discover ways to play. They’d by no means heard steel or rock songs earlier than, however their instructor gave them his laptop computer they usually found playlists crammed with songs by bands just like the Purple Scorching Chili Peppers and the Armenian-US heavy steel group System of a Down.
“It was then that we found steel,” Marysa mentioned.
The ladies started taking part in at native music festivals and importing their exhibits to Fb the place they rapidly started to draw curiosity. In addition they posted covers of songs which additionally obtained constructive evaluations.
In 2018, they launched their first single “College Revolution” which took on an sudden lifetime of its personal because of social media.
“In 2019, there were demonstrations [by students protesting against changes to the criminal code] throughout Indonesia and folks would add movies of the rallies with our tune taking part in excessive,” Marsya mentioned.
From that time on, the group turned synonymous with music that resonated with Indonesia’s youth and tackled themes of feminine empowerment, environmental destruction and pacifism – with the trio singing in English, Indonesian and Sundanese.
Flourishing music scene
Indonesia isn’t any stranger to heavy steel and outgoing President Joko Widodo, higher often called Jokowi, is thought for being a fan of bands like Metallica and Megadeth.
The nation additionally hosts the Hammersonic Competition – the most important steel music pageant in Southeast Asia.
“All through its journey, the punk and rock scene in Indonesia has been drastically influenced by developments over time,” Mikail “Mike” Israfil, the lead singer of Indonesian punk band Marjinal, instructed Al Jazeera.
“Expertise and modernity have had a giant affect on the form and improvement of the scene. The present problem confronted by artists is how to reply to change itself. What’s attention-grabbing is that the punk and rock scene in Indonesia is more and more open, aware of house and aware of kind, in order that it is ready to present its high quality.”
Inside this context, Israfil mentioned, VOB “continues to bulldoze the boundaries of no class, no borders”.
Hikmawan “Indra” Saefullah, who performed guitar within the Indonesian indie band Alone at Final from 2002 to 2013 and is a lecturer in Indonesian research on the College of New England, instructed Al Jazeera that “the existence and achievements of VoB deserve appreciation”.
“The rock music scene in Indonesia has fairly a protracted historical past and legendary bands and musicians. Sadly, on the whole, it has been dominated by male bands and musicians with few feminine performers, though again within the Sixties and 70s we had a legendary all-female rock band named Dara Puspita.”
With that in thoughts, Hikmawan described VOB as “the brand new technology of the Indonesian rock music scene”.
“They began their careers from the underside, and developed dynamically. Their look carrying hijab [the Muslim headscarf] has not stopped them from persevering with to play rock and steel music, though many individuals have criticised them, particularly from conservative circles.”
These “conservative circles” included the ladies’s personal households, who had been hesitant to start with.
Marysa’s mother and father banned her from taking part in music and, one night when she got here dwelling late after acting at a pageant, she discovered that she had been locked out of her home as punishment.
“I needed to sit exterior for hours earlier than they unlocked the door,” she says, laughing on the reminiscence.
In Widi’s case, her older sister didn’t need her to attend music festivals, telling her that she was “ruining her future” by taking part in steel music, a sentiment echoed by Siti’s household who branded her new musical profession “an unserious interest”.
However because the band’s fame grew, their households had a change of coronary heart.
“It was after they noticed us on native TV for the primary time that they began to help us,” Widi mentioned.
‘Ethical accountability’
The band get inspiration for his or her music from their private experiences, and a few of their songs are direct responses to the criticisms that ladies mustn’t play heavy steel.
Marysa’s favorite tune is, What’s the Holy (Nobel) right this moment, which she says is about ignoring haters and “surrendering to the next energy” whereas Siti favours their 2021 hit, the pointedly named, God enable me (please) to play music.
Earlier than they go on stage, the band pray and spend time collectively as a trio with out exterior interruptions, one thing that Marysa mentioned is vital “to foster their chemistry as a band” – though they proceed to have their variations.
Requested in the event that they ever argue, the ladies collapse into giggles. They argue about many issues, Marysa says, however often these are trivial, akin to what they wish to eat for dinner.
The ladies lived collectively for 3 years in Jakarta from 2020 to 2023 earlier than they cut up from their document label and have become an unbiased band. When requested what prompted this choice, they reply in typical steel style.
“We’re too wild and might’t be managed,” Widi says with fun.
They’re completely happy to be again in Garut, for now, the place the climate is cooler and the ambiance calmer than Jakarta, however turning into unbiased has additionally introduced its personal challenges. They’ve needed to run their social media themselves and are additionally constructing a studio in Garut which must be mission managed, along with planning a tour Indonesia, having beforehand toured in France, the Netherlands and the US.
Whereas they discover life in Garut extra peaceable in some ways, there was pushback within the conservative regency, in addition to on-line, with the ladies repeatedly receiving threatening messages. Are they involved that individuals may very well damage them?
“I’m very apprehensive that it might occur,” Marysa admitted.
As soon as, when the vocalist was on her method dwelling from band follow in Garut, somebody threw a rock at her. She didn’t go to follow once more for per week. Siti has additionally obtained hateful feedback on-line, principally within the type of physique shaming, with trolls branding her “too brief and too fats” and commenting on her pores and skin.
“They mentioned that, as a global musician, I ought to watch my eating regimen, then they bullied me about my pimples, saying that I ought to have the cash to get it handled.”
When this occurs, Siti talks to her bandmates in regards to the feedback.
“They often inform me to disregard them and level out that the folks making the feedback are ugly too,” she mentioned, laughing. “By the subsequent day, I’ve often forgotten about them.”
Widi mentioned that trolls additionally prefer to assault her expertise as a bass participant.
“They inform me that there are numerous bass gamers who’re higher than me and ask why I’m even bothering to play. Normally I reply and inform them that I’m going to maintain taking part in no matter they are saying.”
Marysa additionally factors out the plain sexism within the sorts of feedback they obtain. Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, has 1000’s of male rock, punk and steel bands who’re by no means accused of doing one thing that’s haram or forbidden in Islam.
“In Garut there are such a lot of male bands they usually by no means have any issues. It’s so contradictive,” Marsya mentioned.
When requested what the longer term holds for VOB, Siti’s message is easy.
“Once I play music. It makes me completely happy and I also can help myself and my household financially. So it’s such a constructive factor for me. We are going to preserve taking part in for so long as we will,” she mentioned.
“I’ll play music till I don’t wish to any extra,” added Marsya.
For now nonetheless, they’re specializing in Glastonbury, and are planning on tenting throughout the pageant to allow them to absolutely immerse themselves within the ambiance of Worthy Farm.
They’re additionally busy designing their costumes for the present which can function conventional materials from Garut and Indonesian motifs together with the nation’s crimson and white flag.
Inside the vortex of controversy that has at all times surrounded the trio, the ladies are cognisant of the load that comes with the June 28 efficiency.
“It’s quite a lot of stress and we really feel an ethical accountability,” Marysa mentioned. “It isn’t simply our title up there on stage, however our nation’s as effectively.”