Jambinai
Jambinai sound less like a band than a force of nature, fusing the full
dramatic range of post-rock dynamics to Korean folk roots to create an
exhilarating, vivid and unique fusion. Their instrumental music is
coloured by Kim’s fiddle-like haegum, Ilwoo Lee’s guitar and piri (a
Korean flute made of bamboo) and Eun Youg Sim’s geomungo, a Korean
zither. They met studying traditional music at Korea’s National
University of Arts, and found they were united by a desire to present
such music in a new way, “to communicate with the ordinary person who
doesn’t listen to Korean traditional music,” says Lee, the band’s
principal writer. This makeover, however, eschews previous Korean
modernists, who Lee says have used western classical music or jazz, for a
molten fusion of metal, rock and experimental sound. “We’re darker than
other Korean traditional bands,” Lee adds, with considerable
understatement.