Traditional churchgoers, however, believe that loud rock music has no place in a house of God
HELSINKI: Most teens may not get excited about church, but in Finland they go out of their way to attend in the latest testimony to the country’s infatuation with heavy metal music: Metal Mass.
“It’s nice that there are slightly different church services compared to the usual ones,” says 15-year-old Teea Pallaskari, who skipped geography class to make the service in the plain, red-brick Lutheran Church — the state religion — in this small town about 60 kilometres (40 miles) north of Helsinki.
Inside, Pallaskari and her mates squash on packed pews, belting out hymns as a lead singer moshes wildly onstage to his band’s earsplitting tones.
When the music stops, the students burst into ecstatic applause and whistles — to smiling approval from Pastor Haka Kekaelaeinen. It’s Metal Mass and it’s okay to be loud. “It was really good,” Akseli Inkinen, a 17-year-old high school student with long, messy hair later.
It is hardly surprising that masses with metal hymns have surfaced in Finland, which won the Eurovision Song Contest for the first time in 2006 with Lordi’s monster heavy metal song “Hard Rock Hallelujah”.
If it has a niche audience elsewhere, heavy metal is now mainstream in Finland. Helsinki alone abounds with heavy metal bars, adding to the dozens of summertime heavy metal festivals held around the Nordic country. Some say the answer lies in the Finnish character.
“Finns are known to be reserved, serious and very honest ... Somehow heavy metal fits into this as it is no-nonsense, honest, straightforward and quite gloomy,” Mikko Saari, a co-founder of Metallimessu, said. “When you switch on the radio, you hear heavy metal music. The Finnish Eurovision Song Contest and even ‘Idols’ (the Finnish equivalent to the “American Idol” competition), were won with metal songs,” says Kimmo
Kuusniemi, one of Finland’s metal music pioneers.
The first metal mass in Finland was held in 2006 a festival in Helsinki. Since then, a Metal Mass tour bus has been zigzagging across the country.
Not everyone is happy. Some feel loud music has no place in a house of God, and some metal fans accuse the church of co-opting their music to lure teens. “Of course some Christian circles were scared and some true metal people were irate. But many said that the idea was great and that they had been waiting for it,” Saari says.