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Feature image of Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

1 min read

1 min read

Feature image of Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism
Bliss-Illusion from Beijing riffs on Buddhist scripture in their eclectic post-metal vocabulary

Today’s exploration of the intersection between local tradition and the international language of metal comes via Si Miao (嗣妙), a video platform launched last year to tell bite-sized stories about Buddhism to a popular audience. If this is your general thing, the channel is worth a closer look overall (Si Miao’s 42nd episode, released earlier this week, is about a hipster calligrapher). If you just want to cut straight to the metal, here’s a member of Beijing band Yu Ji talking about his twin interests in Buddhist cosmology and heavy metal:

Yu Ji — English name: the thoroughly Buddhist Bliss-Illusion — formed in 2015, and is gearing up to put their 2018 debut Shinrabansho on the international market via a release on French label Anesthetize Productions next month. “Post-Black Metal with folk and ritualistic elements,” says the press release, and judging by the track titles the dharma is strong on this one. If I had to choose just one track to recommend, it might be “Naraka” (the Sanskrit word for hell), but you can stream the entire atmospheric, Maya-piercing trip right now on YouTube ahead of the album’s formal April 2 release:

Cover image: “Singing Buddhist Scriptures in Heavy Metal” by Si Miao (QQ Video)

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Feature image of Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

1 min read

Bliss-Illusion from Beijing riffs on Buddhist scripture in their eclectic post-metal vocabulary

Today’s exploration of the intersection between local tradition and the international language of metal comes via Si Miao (嗣妙), a video platform launched last year to tell bite-sized stories about Buddhism to a popular audience. If this is your general thing, the channel is worth a closer look overall (Si Miao’s 42nd episode, released earlier this week, is about a hipster calligrapher). If you just want to cut straight to the metal, here’s a member of Beijing band Yu Ji talking about his twin interests in Buddhist cosmology and heavy metal:

Yu Ji — English name: the thoroughly Buddhist Bliss-Illusion — formed in 2015, and is gearing up to put their 2018 debut Shinrabansho on the international market via a release on French label Anesthetize Productions next month. “Post-Black Metal with folk and ritualistic elements,” says the press release, and judging by the track titles the dharma is strong on this one. If I had to choose just one track to recommend, it might be “Naraka” (the Sanskrit word for hell), but you can stream the entire atmospheric, Maya-piercing trip right now on YouTube ahead of the album’s formal April 2 release:

Cover image: “Singing Buddhist Scriptures in Heavy Metal” by Si Miao (QQ Video)

You might also like:

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

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Feature image of Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

1 min read

1 min read

Feature image of Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism
Bliss-Illusion from Beijing riffs on Buddhist scripture in their eclectic post-metal vocabulary

Today’s exploration of the intersection between local tradition and the international language of metal comes via Si Miao (嗣妙), a video platform launched last year to tell bite-sized stories about Buddhism to a popular audience. If this is your general thing, the channel is worth a closer look overall (Si Miao’s 42nd episode, released earlier this week, is about a hipster calligrapher). If you just want to cut straight to the metal, here’s a member of Beijing band Yu Ji talking about his twin interests in Buddhist cosmology and heavy metal:

Yu Ji — English name: the thoroughly Buddhist Bliss-Illusion — formed in 2015, and is gearing up to put their 2018 debut Shinrabansho on the international market via a release on French label Anesthetize Productions next month. “Post-Black Metal with folk and ritualistic elements,” says the press release, and judging by the track titles the dharma is strong on this one. If I had to choose just one track to recommend, it might be “Naraka” (the Sanskrit word for hell), but you can stream the entire atmospheric, Maya-piercing trip right now on YouTube ahead of the album’s formal April 2 release:

Cover image: “Singing Buddhist Scriptures in Heavy Metal” by Si Miao (QQ Video)

You might also like:

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

RADII NEWSLETTER

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Feature image of Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

1 min read

Bliss-Illusion from Beijing riffs on Buddhist scripture in their eclectic post-metal vocabulary

Today’s exploration of the intersection between local tradition and the international language of metal comes via Si Miao (嗣妙), a video platform launched last year to tell bite-sized stories about Buddhism to a popular audience. If this is your general thing, the channel is worth a closer look overall (Si Miao’s 42nd episode, released earlier this week, is about a hipster calligrapher). If you just want to cut straight to the metal, here’s a member of Beijing band Yu Ji talking about his twin interests in Buddhist cosmology and heavy metal:

Yu Ji — English name: the thoroughly Buddhist Bliss-Illusion — formed in 2015, and is gearing up to put their 2018 debut Shinrabansho on the international market via a release on French label Anesthetize Productions next month. “Post-Black Metal with folk and ritualistic elements,” says the press release, and judging by the track titles the dharma is strong on this one. If I had to choose just one track to recommend, it might be “Naraka” (the Sanskrit word for hell), but you can stream the entire atmospheric, Maya-piercing trip right now on YouTube ahead of the album’s formal April 2 release:

Cover image: “Singing Buddhist Scriptures in Heavy Metal” by Si Miao (QQ Video)

You might also like:

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

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Feature image of Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

Watch: This Beijing Metal Band Mixes Burzum with Buddhism

Bliss-Illusion from Beijing riffs on Buddhist scripture in their eclectic post-metal vocabulary

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