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  • HUME: The World Without a Guarantee
    Jun 13 2026

    Episode 5 of Music Worlds enters the released Bijux album Theater Album: Hume through the episode title HUME: The World Without a Guarantee.

    This is not a biography of David Hume, not a lecture, and not a concept on paper. It is an already released theatrical music work, available on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and other major platforms.

    HUME: The World Without a Guarantee stages Hume inside one quiet room in Edinburgh. Rain touches the window. A candle bends in the draft. Two billiard balls rest on green cloth. A mirror stands near the wall. A letter lies unopened. A church bell sounds outside. A newspaper reports blood. A backgammon board waits near the fire.

    Hume never leaves the room.

    But the whole world enters it.

    The album is built around one calm but severe question:

    What if the world does not come with a guarantee?

    The world itself is not on trial. The trial is of our guarantees: cause, self, tomorrow, reason, religion, morality, and certainty. Hume does not destroy the world. He removes its false certificate.

    The episode follows how the album turns philosophy into theater: impression becomes idea; repetition becomes habit; habit becomes expectation; cause loses visible necessity; belief gains weight; the self loses its throne; reason loses its crown; religion faces evidence; morality enters through sympathy; and ordinary life returns after doubt.

    The journey moves through the full theater album:

    • Prologue — The Room Without a Guarantee — the room opens as a quiet courtroom of human certainty
    • The World Strikes First — before doctrine or system, the world enters through flame, hunger, pain, and contact
    • Fainter Fire — ideas become remembered flame, powerful but indebted to experience
    • The Mind Makes Roads — association turns scattered impressions into a livable world
    • Tomorrow Has No Proof — the future is expected from the past, but no seal is placed on the morning
    • The Ball Moves — two billiard balls expose the difference between sequence and necessity
    • Belief Gives Weight — thought becomes near, forceful, and practical
    • The Theater With No Master — the self is not an inner monarch, but continuity held by memory, perception, relation, and habit
    • The King That Could Not Command — reason sees and compares, but passion gives action force
    • The Bell Cannot Prove the Sky — prayer, miracle, testimony, fear, and hope face the demand for evidence
    • The Newspaper and the Heart — facts describe the murder, but sympathy makes cruelty morally visible
    • Epilogue — Backgammon After the Abyss — after certainty fails, ordinary life returns: fire, bread, friendship, laughter, and the game

    This is not Hume as a cold destroyer. It is Hume as a quiet examiner. The album does not say that science collapses, morality disappears, or ordinary life becomes meaningless. It says that our strongest certainties are not guaranteed in the way we imagined.

    The sun has risen before; that is not a vow.

    The ball moves; necessity hides.

    The mirror gives a face, but not a soul.

    The bell can shake the room, but it cannot prove the sky.

    The fact stands cold; the heart finds cruelty.

    And still, the album does not end in emptiness. The fire is warm. The friend enters. Bread is on the table. The backgammon board opens.

    HUME: The World Without a Guarantee asks whether human life can continue after certainty loses its crown. The answer is not proof. The answer is human nature: experience, habit, belief, passion, sympathy, friendship, science, justice, and common life.

    The world has no guarantee.

    Human nature makes it hold.

    Find Bijux on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and other major music platforms.

    Presented by Bijux Studio.

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    36 Min.
  • Literature Album — Kafka: Metamorphosis + Full Album
    Jun 11 2026

    Episode 4 of Music Worlds enters KAFKA: A SMALL DELAY, a literature album by Bijux Studio, through the episode title Kafka: Metamorphosis.

    This episode begins with a deep-dive conversation on the album’s world, structure, and meaning. After that discussion, the episode moves into the music itself, presenting the complete album as a continuous dark art-rock and chamber-pop journey.

    KAFKA: A SMALL DELAY is inspired by Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis, but it is not a gothic horror retelling, not a biography, and not a lecture. It is a musical interpretation of one precise tragedy: a useful son becomes unusable.

    Gregor Samsa does not simply become vermin. He loses function first, speech second, room third, name fourth, and finally place. The album follows that disappearance through voices, objects, rooms, family language, and sound.

    At the center of the episode is one grammatical transformation:

    I → he → it → we

    Gregor begins as the lead voice: anxious, practical, embarrassed, and still trying to remain useful. Track by track, his voice is reduced, interrupted, displaced, and finally removed. By the end, he has no voice left. Only his musical trace remains, absorbed into the family’s new life.

    The episode explores how the album translates Kafka into music: how the apartment becomes a machine, how ordinary objects become moral instruments, and how the family slowly changes its grammar around someone who can no longer perform his assigned role.

    The journey moves through ten songs:

    • I’ll Be Ready — the first delay, the clock, the train, and the useful man trying to remain useful
    • Right Side Down — the body becoming a mechanical problem before the mind can explain what has happened
    • Say It Again — speech failing at the door while the family hears less and less of Gregor
    • For Your Own Sake — office language becoming polite pressure, with concern turning into threat
    • The Tray — care becoming routine, and routine becoming distance
    • His Chair Was Large — the father’s authority returning as Gregor becomes small on the floor
    • Leave One Thing — the room being emptied, and the last signs of personhood being removed
    • The Violin Was Not for Them — Grete’s music exposing the life she almost had and the brother she can no longer carry
    • It Cannot Stay — the final pronoun, where Gregor loses his name
    • A Brighter Apartment — the family stepping into spring while Gregor’s motif returns without his voice

    KAFKA: A SMALL DELAY is built from clocks, bedframes, doors, typewriter rhythms, trays, chairs, furniture drag, violin, stop-time pronouns, and a final tram bell. The story is carried not through explanation, but through objects, rooms, practical sentences, and the gradual disappearance of a voice.

    That is the wound of the album: the music becomes cleaner as Gregor disappears.

    The nightmare is not only Gregor’s transformation. The nightmare is how quickly the home becomes livable once he is gone.

    At the beginning, Gregor disturbs the machine. At the end, the machine sings beautifully without him.

    Find Bijux on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and other major music platforms.

    Presented by Bijux Studio.

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    1 Std. und 18 Min.
  • NIETZSCHE: The Hammer and the Lyre
    Jun 9 2026

    Episode 3 of Music Worlds enters the released Bijux Studio album Theater Album: Nietzsche.

    This episode uses the title NIETZSCHE: The Hammer and the Lyre, because that phrase names the inner drama of the album: Nietzsche arriving with a hammer to test hollow idols, and a lyre to give the wound rhythm.

    Theater Album: Nietzsche is not a biography, not a lecture, and not a future concept. It is an already released theatrical music work, available now on major music platforms including Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, and others.

    The album stages Nietzsche as a musical trial. A church bell cracks. The old heaven loses its authority. The marketplace laughs at noon. Morality is placed on a surgeon’s table. The body returns. The priest feeds the wound. Apollo gives form. Dionysus breaks the room. The ring asks again. And finally, the cracked bell becomes rhythm.

    At the center of the episode is one question:

    After the collapse of inherited meaning, what kind of human being can live without becoming smaller?

    The episode follows the album’s full transformation: a cracked church bell becomes a hammer; the hammer becomes a drum; the drum becomes a dance; and the dance becomes a yes.

    The journey moves through the full theater album:

    • Prologue — The Bell Cracks — the old sacred order breaks, but its emotional force remains
    • Your God Is Dead, Your Knees Remember — belief collapses, yet the body still carries guilt, obedience, and inherited shame
    • No Heaven Will Pay Your Debt — the album turns from the empty sky back to earth, body, bread, sun, mud, and this life
    • Every Truth Has a Body — truth is examined as hunger, wound, fear, perspective, and form of life
    • They Called Their Fear Good — morality becomes genealogy, and fear is exposed when it disguises itself as virtue
    • The Priest Fed the Wound — suffering receives poisonous meaning through guilt, bad conscience, and the ascetic ideal
    • Apollo Measures, Dionysus Breaks — tragic art becomes the hinge from diagnosis to transfiguration
    • Life Wants More Than Survival — will to power is heard as creative overflow, interpretation, shaping, and form-giving
    • Become Worthy of Your Name — the self is not found, but forged through solitude, discipline, sickness, and height
    • The Ring Asks Again — eternal recurrence appears as the heaviest test: can this exact life be affirmed again?
    • Amor Fati — love of fate becomes the final yes, where the wound is not erased but made into music
    • Epilogue — Zarathustra Comes Down Laughing — Nietzsche descends from the mountain, leaving the listener with the demand to become the dance

    This is not Nietzsche explained as a textbook. It is Nietzsche staged through sound: cracked bell, hammer strike, wounded lyre, ritual drum, circular bass, mountain wind, and final dance.

    The episode explores why the lyrics were written this way, how the motifs evolve across the album, and how the music moves from collapse and moral autopsy toward tragic art, self-overcoming, eternal recurrence, and amor fati.

    Theater Album: Nietzsche asks whether suffering can become form, whether the wound can become lyre, whether the cracked bell can become rhythm, and whether a human being can answer life with yes.

    Find Bijux on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and other major music platforms.

    Presented by Bijux Studio.

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    47 Min.
  • Deep Instruments — Duduk: One Instrument, One World + Full Album
    Jun 7 2026

    Episode 2 of Music Worlds enters Deep Instruments — Duduk by Bijux Studio.

    This episode begins with a focused introduction to the Armenian duduk: its breath, reed, apricot wood, human warmth, and emotional depth. After that introduction, the episode moves into the music itself, presenting the album as a continuous instrumental journey.

    Deep Instruments — Duduk is the first chapter of the Deep Instruments series. The series is built around one idea: some instruments are not only musical tools. They carry worlds. In this album, the duduk is not used as background color. It becomes the center — a voice of breath, memory, restraint, tenderness, sorrow, warmth, and endurance.

    The album moves through ten pieces:

    • Apricot Wood — the material beginning, warm wood before speech
    • Ghamish — reed, breath, and the fragile opening of voice
    • The Dam Holds — pressure, restraint, and emotion kept behind stone
    • The Withheld Turn — the phrase that almost changes, but does not yet break
    • Dhol at the Table — ritual pulse entering the room
    • The Table Song — memory gathered around a shared surface
    • Duduk at the Window — distance, night, and the private sound of looking outward
    • The Long Note — breath extended until it becomes a landscape
    • When Breath Failed — the moment where sound reaches its human limit
    • What the Dam Kept — what remains after restraint, silence, and release

    This is not background relaxation or generic world-instrument atmosphere. It is a Music Worlds episode about how one breath-driven instrument can become a complete emotional landscape, followed by the album it prepares the listener to enter.

    Find Bijux on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and other major music platforms.

    Presented by Bijux Studio.

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    1 Std. und 2 Min.
  • The Inner Series: The Inner Life Has Places
    Jun 6 2026

    Episode 1 explores the Inner Series by Bijux Studio.

    The episode begins with a simple but serious question: what if distraction, restlessness, and the inability to focus are not just failures of discipline, but signs that the nervous system does not yet feel safe?

    Through a deep-dive conversation, this episode introduces the central idea of the Inner Series: the inner life has places. Rooms, light, horizons, rivers, fire, gardens, stars, and harbors become emotional architectures — ways of understanding focus, joy, hope, movement, creativity, patience, meaning, and rest.

    The discussion moves through the eight Inner Series albums:

    • Inner Architecture — safety, boundaries, and the return of focus
    • Inner Radiance — learning to trust warmth, joy, and light
    • Inner Horizon — hope before certainty
    • Inner River — movement after rigidity and freeze
    • Inner Fire — creation as an inner necessity, not productivity
    • Inner Garden — tenderness, patience, and care without extraction
    • Inner Cosmos — meaning without needing to possess the mystery
    • Inner Harbor — shelter, recovery, and rest without surrender

    This is not background music or generic relaxation. It is a conceptual instrumental journey about how sound can help build an inner room strong enough to carry life.

    Find Bijux on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and other major music platforms.

    Presented by Bijux Studio.

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    35 Min.