Transmutation of Fate

$10.95

Egypt’s death metal legends return with ritualistic riffs, cinematic orchestration, and crushing aggression. Experience the global rise of SCARAB—extreme metal like never before.


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Egyptian Brutal Death Metal 

Brutal Records proudly presents Transmutation of Fate, the new EP from Egypt’s legendary death metal force SCARAB. Fusing crushing riffs, cinematic orchestrations, and Egyptian mysticism, SCARAB delivers a ritualistic metal experience that transcends borders.

Formed in 2006, SCARAB has forged a global legacy with landmark performances at Dubai Desert Rock Festival, With Full Force (Germany), and Bloodstock Open Air (UK). With Transmutation of Fate, the band continues its reign as pioneers of Egyptian extreme metal, blending relentless aggression with atmospheric depth for fans worldwide.

Experience the awakening. The ritual begins.

1 review for Transmutation of Fate

  1. Brutalife

    Track-by-Track Analysis: SCARAB – Transmutation of Fate

    On Transmutation of Fate, SCARAB approach composition as ritual architecture. Each track functions as a distinct chamber within a larger alchemical process, progressing from awakening to confrontation, revelation, and finally domination. Below is a detailed examination of how each song contributes to the EP’s transformative arc—both musically and conceptually.

    1. Vow of the Sphinx {Abou El-Houl}

    The EP opens with its ideological and spiritual foundation. “Vow of the Sphinx” is constructed as an invocation—slowly unfolding, patient, and imposing. The riffs are carved with deliberate weight, favoring massive, hypnotic repetition over immediacy. Rhythmically, the track balances crushing low-end churn with sudden accelerations, evoking the sensation of something ancient stirring beneath the sand.

    Lyrically and thematically, this is the moment of awakening: the Magus stands before forgotten knowledge and chooses remembrance over oblivion. The song’s atmosphere carries a sense of concealed power—SCARAB are not rushing the reveal. Instead, they allow tension to accumulate, mirroring the idea of withheld wisdom finally stepping into the light. It is both an oath and a threshold, setting the tone for everything that follows.

    2. Hands from the Sun {Amon}

    Where the opener awakens, “Hands from the Sun” asserts force. This track is more aggressive in its forward motion, driven by sharper tremolo lines and more pronounced rhythmic violence. The drumming emphasizes ritualistic repetition, creating a relentless pulse that feels ceremonial rather than purely technical.

    Conceptually aligned with Amon—divine authority and hidden sovereignty—the song radiates dominance and illumination through destruction. There is an underlying sense of inevitability here: the riffs feel less exploratory and more declarative, as if the transformation initiated in the first track has now become irreversible. SCARAB harness solar symbolism not as enlightenment, but as annihilating clarity.

    3. Epistle of Secrets {Creators of III}

    The EP’s most introspective and layered composition, “Epistle of Secrets” operates as the axis of reflection within Transmutation of Fate. Musically, the track alternates between suffocating density and moments of ominous space, allowing melodies to surface like coded messages buried within the chaos.

    The outro riff—historically rooted in SCARAB’s earliest creative period—carries immense emotional and symbolic weight. Its reemergence does not feel nostalgic; rather, it feels resolved. This is musical karma being untied in real time. The track embodies transmission: knowledge passed, hidden, and finally decrypted. It is here that the EP most clearly demonstrates how time itself has become a compositional tool.

    4. Monarch of Violence {Oriasirius}

    Closing the EP is its most commanding statement. “Monarch of Violence” does not rush toward an ending; it conquers it. The riffs are militant and authoritarian, locking into mid-to-up-tempo structures that emphasize control over chaos. There is a predatory precision in the arrangement—every accent, stop, and surge feels intentional.

    Thematically, the track represents sovereignty after transmutation. Violence here is not blind rage but disciplined force—the final form achieved after spiritual and karmic purification. SCARAB end the EP not with collapse, but with ascension through dominance, leaving the listener with the impression that something has been sealed, crowned, and unleashed.

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