SIGILLUM S PLAY BARDO THOS-GROL:
May 23, 2026 - EX CONVENTO DI SAN FRANCESCO, PORDENONE.
A sealed work, opened after forty years
On 23 May 2026, within the setting of NOMADS International Noise Fest at the Ex Convento di San Francesco, Pordenone, Sigillum S will perform Bardo Thos-Grol live in its entirety for the first time ever.
Originally released in 1987, Bardo Thos-Grol has long been regarded as one of the most enigmatic and revered works in ritual, electro-acoustic, and occult experimental music ... a composition whose very nature resisted live translation for decades.
This 2026 performance marks the first breaking of the seal: not a revival, but an invocation.
The work: sound as passage, not representation
Bardo Thos-Grol takes its name and conceptual structure from the Tibetan Book of the Dead, a guide intended not for the living but for consciousness in transition.
At the time, Sigillum S did not attempt a literal or ethnographic interpretation; instead, the work functions as a sonic parallel ritual, where sound replaces text and vibration replaces instruction.
The album unfolds as a sequence of threshold states—Skandha, Nirmanakaya, Sambhogakaya, Tchöd—mirroring stages of dissolution and re-formation.
Its materials include ethnic instruments, bone instruments, drones, and early electro-acoustic manipulation, assembled not as tracks, but as zones of suspension.
From its first private cassette edition onward, the work gained a reputation as something meant to be listened to in isolation, outside the logic of performance, documentation, or repetition.
Why it was never played live
In fact, unlike much of Sigillum S’s later catalog, Bardo Thos-Grol was conceived without the stage in mind.
Its original instrumentation, ritual pacing, and non-linear time structure made it incompatible with conventional concert formats, while its symbolic density placed it closer to a ceremonial system than to a performable score.
For decades, the work remained isolated as a stand-alone work… a fixed artifact, immune to reinterpretation.
Even as Sigillum S continued to evolve through live electronics, noise, and speculative sound practice, Bardo Thos-Grol remained deliberately untouched.
2026: from artifact to event
The 2026 performance is now framed explicitly as a singular, non-routine event: this presentation coincides with the 40th anniversary of the work recording and, as such, it’s special and unrepeatable.
For this occasion, the formation expands beyond the original duo of Eraldo Bernocchi and Paolo L. Bandera to include Xabier Iriondo and Lorenzo Esposito Fornasari, as well as visual intervention by Petulia Mattioli.
This expanded ensemble allows the work to be embodied for the first time, not reconstructed… translating the original ritual logic into a collective, physical presence rather than a sentimental reenactment.
The performance concept: sound as threshold
The live
Bardo Thos-Grol is conceived as a rite of passage for the audience
itself.
As also highlighted in the curatorial framework of NOMADS,
the performance is embedded in an idea of temporary community,
pilgrimage, and shared transformation, where sound becomes a binding
language rather than an object of consumption.
The main presentation is preceded by individual fragments from the participating artists, which act as personal trajectories, converging into the collective ritual: the full invocation emerges only after this convergence, reinforcing the sense of crossing and arrival
In this structure, Bardo Thos-Grol functions less as a concert, and more as a sonic architecture of transition.
Visuals, space, and resonance
The
choice of the Ex Convento di San Francesco in Pordenone is also not
incidental.
Its historical, acoustic, and symbolic resonance
aligns with the work’s emphasis on liminality and suspension … a
space neither fully sacred nor secular, neither historical nor
contemporary.
On top of this, Petulia Mattioli’s visual intervention is conceived not as illustration, but as sacramental interference: light, image, and spatial articulation operating in parallel with sound, reinforcing the sense of threshold rather than narrative.
A living seal
More than a first performance, the 2026 live Bardo Thos-Grol represents at the same time the activation of a dormant work, the transformation of a recording into a timespecific event and a rare alignment between archive, body, space, and community.
“For the first time in 40 years, the seal is broken” … what follows is not repetition, but actual crossing of space and time.
