Interview Bloody Tyrant - English

Interview Bloody Tyrant - English

Interviews 16 Juin 2020

During the Cernunnos Pagan Fest, I’ve had the pleasure to talk with the Taiwanese band Bloody Tyrant! Despite the poor conditions of the interview, it’s been very interesting and I’m sure you’ll learn some things below!

 

 

Radio Metal Sound: First of all, I've read in an interview that back in the days, you used to play "true Black Metal" whereas now it's still Black Metal but it's merged with more atmospheric landscapes, with traditional sounds, so I'd like to know how have you taken this turn as a band

 

Bloody Tyrant: One day I thought that I wanted to add something special, something native to our Black Metal. When I started learning music, I learnt traditional Chinese music as Taiwanese music has a lot of influences from Chinese music, so I added an instrument called pipa into our album. And as we're music nerds who play instruments and computer instrument every day, we added more and more instruments and our last album came like this

 

Radio Metal Sound: It brings up an interesting point: you've talked about Taiwanese music so I feel like this specificity you have is that this atmospheric sound is both your identity as a band and your cultural identity so it brings another questions: is a part of your music related to politics? 

 

Bloody Tyrant: Taiwan is in a special situation. If you take your iPhone and type Taiwan, the flag is not the flag we raise, the emoji is the flag of the republic of China. All the Taiwanese bands try to express this concept of Taiwanese independence. 
In our first album you can find our political intentions, especially in our lyrics - which were written in mandarin, but I think that someone translated them in English, you can find them on the internet. We put a lot of political messages in our lyrics. As we've said, the Taiwanese political situation is very complicated. The relationship with China is tensed because of historical and political problems. China always wanted to claim Taiwan as a part of their land but that's curious for us as we have our own government, our own land, our own army, our own people, our own election system, everything... So why would we be a part of them? During this European tour, we'll try to express the right message to the people, no matter where they come from and we're trying to tell them that we are a part of China: we are from Taiwan, as an independent country. 
An interesting thing about our passports is that it's not "Taiwan", it's "Republic of China" and it's a fault because the previous army of China lost a war and retreated to Taiwan and the first thing the Republic of China does to Taiwan is shooting people. Many Taiwanese try to correct this, to say "we're not the republic of China, we're Taiwan". During the war, there were the Republic of China and eople Republic of China (PRC) but even though the Republic of China lost, they still claim they're the real China while PRC claim they are the real China. So, who's the real China?
But back in the 1950's, our President decided to pull us out of the United Nations (UN). He did that because the PRC also wanted to get into the UN and our former president said "If you're in, then I'm out" so the PRC is the real republic of China for the society now. 
As we are Taiwanese, we have our own culture, our own language - although our language originates from China - so we should be an independent country. And during WWII, Japan invaded Taiwan but when Japan lost and retreated, Taiwan had 50 days without government, during that time, Taiwan became independent but before Taiwan became independent, the KMT (Kuomintang, Chinese nationalist party) party came and massacred everyone. They ran martial laws for forty years and during forty years the culture has vanished, Taiwanese’s great people are killed... Actually, it influences the Metal scene in Taiwan and every subculture is impacted with this. 

 

RMS: It also means that part of the rebellious spirit you're making in Black Metal is due to this history? 

 

BT: Yes, exactly!

 

RMS: Now that the political aspect is done, I'd like to dwell into the lyrical composition of your music. I don't know if it's an accurate analysis but you've written a lot about mythology, but I felt like your last album shrank this aspect in favour of an historical point of view and the question of values. Is it true? 

 

BT: You know, Taiwan has a really close relationship to Japan. Hagakure is U turn for our style because it's a Folk Metal album and I'm fond of Japanese culture so I decided to write something about the concept of death for samurais. Taiwan still has a really close relationship to Japan as it's been a part of Japan during the WWII

 

RMS: To dwell on the notion of mythology, I'd like to know how did you receive the European mythology back in the days and how do you try to include your own mythology in your music

 

BT: Basically, for our upcoming album, we collected a lot of mythology in Taiwan (from our indigenous...) and then we compose. As you are a European, you may listen to this mythology when you're a child, it may be a bedtime story but in Taiwan there's no such thing. There's a Taiwanese mythology but much people don't know this because the KMT destroyed the indigenous culture. It should be every Taiwanese child's bedtime story, just like you! We hope we can tell more Taiwanese that we actually have our own mythology from our ancestors. We have our own mythology which is not what the KMT says. 

 

RMS: My last question is to know what do you plan for the future of Bloody Tyrant? You've talked about another album, is there something more? 

 

BT: Yeah! We're not pursuing something, we're just doing what we love. A lot of Taiwanese Metal bands sort of died and we think it's because they had a desire to get somewhere. However, in Taiwan the Metal scene is horrible, less than 20 Metal bands, so in concerts you have like 20 people and that's why the passion was put out of some bands. We think we can keep on going because we don't have an aim, we do this because we love the music, we're not trying to get somewhere, we just do what we love. 

 

RMS: If the Taiwanese Metal scene is small, aren't you some kind of exception as you're doing a European tour? 

BT: No, we're not!

 

RMS: So how do you explain this popularity of the Metal scene outside Taiwan? 

 

BT: It's the first time for us here so we didn't know what to expect. We had two headline shows during this European tour and because we're relatively unknown in Europe we thought it'd be bad but it wasn't, it's way beyond our expectations! It's hard for us to answer that! 

 

Thanks a lot to Bloody Tyrant and I wish them a lot of courage to broadcast their message, especially because Black Metal is quite deaf to this kind of politics!


A propos de Baptiste

Être ou ne pas être trve ? Baptiste vous en parlera, des jours et des jours. Jusqu'à ce que vous en mourriez d'ennui. C'est une mort lente... Lente et douloureuse... Mais c'est ce qu'aime Baptiste ! L'effet est fortement réduit face à une population de blackeux.