Monumental Movement Podcast
This episode explores the crossroads between hard rock and Eastern mysticism—where amplified sound, spiritual inquiry, and altered perception converge. From the late 1960s onward, many hard rock musicians began integrating philosophical ideas drawn from Buddhism, Hinduism, meditation practices, and psychedelic spirituality into both lyrical themes and sonic experimentation. We trace this evolution through artists such as Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath, whose music combined heavy riff structures with themes of transcendence, cosmology, and existential exploration. Eastern scales, drone textures, and modal improvisation entered rock vocabulary, expanding the emotional and spatial possibilities of amplified music. Historically, this convergence emerged alongside broader countercultural movements of the 1960s and 1970s, when Western musicians increasingly engaged with Asian philosophies and musical traditions. Spiritual searching became intertwined with technological experimentation, studio innovation, and the pursuit of expanded consciousness. Technologically, effects processing, tape manipulation, and extended live improvisation enabled hard rock to move beyond conventional song structures into immersive sonic experiences. Distortion and volume became not only expressions of force, but tools for psychological and sensory transformation. This episode analyzes hard rock as spiritual and sonic journey—where intensity meets introspection, and ritual merges with performance. Through history, philosophy, and aesthetics, we explore how Eastern mysticism reshaped the conceptual horizons of hard rock music. 【Related Column】The intersection of hard rock, oriental philosophy, and mysticism https://monumental-movement.jp/en/Column-Hardrock-Mysticism/
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