I don’t wanna hear more nonsense now
I am and so every day is war
But nights are mine
And of my desires
Night becomes a small act of resistance. When the day has been parceled, priced, and exhausted, darkness offers back the self unmetered. In the hours without bosses or ledgers, desire regains its pulse. Escape is a refusal to let every breath be productive. To choose the night is to claim the preservation of one’s inner life, briefly sovereign, fleetingly whole.
South American post-punks PILGRIMS step forward with Blissing Hour, the third single from their forthcoming album Gemini, arriving like a pressure release timed to collective exhaustion. The song tempers post-punk severity with a swell of euphoria, letting tension breathe as the rhythm nudges bodies out of paralysis and into movement. Sung in both English and Spanish, it treats the night as common ground; a place where urgency slackens, instincts sharpen, and connection feels immediate rather than mediated.
That instinct animates the song’s center. Dance floors become temporary sanctuaries, sensation a shared language. Nighttime here is a claimed space, alive with agency, where pleasure carries purpose and delight signals survival.
“Joy can be a form of resistance,” explains vocalist Juls Garat. “This is true for everyone, but especially for marginalized groups. If we’re not hustling, we’re supposed to be doom scrolling and getting depressed and enraged by watching the news and fighting with strangers on social media. But we can always choose stepping into the real world. We can choose community and hope and joy and art and fun. And sometimes that’s the rebellion we need.”
Directed by Stephanie Houten, the performance video captures the band’s onstage presence in a darkened club, weaving it together with moments of ritualistic dance and blissful reverie.
Watch them break the chains of love below:
Based in Boston, PILGRIMS began in 2018 as Pilgrims of Yearning, founded by Chilean vocalist Juls Garat and Colombian musician Claudio Marcio after meeting in Chile and emigrating together to the U.S. Their sound has been described as “your soundtrack to introspection, lament, and disdain,” and as an eclectic mix of post-punk, coldwave, and Latin American influences. They have previously shared stages with She Past Away, Kaelan Mikla and Vision Video.
Early releases, including 2022’s Hadal EP and the single La Mar, paired rigid rhythms with airy guitars and synths, nodding toward post-punk lineage while asserting a clear emotional center. Now joined by bassist Sean Woodbury, the band reintroduces itself with a sharpened name and focus.
“The name PILGRIMS reflects not only our spiritual journey, but our living experience as immigrants, our pilgrimage,” Marcio explains. “The new album is touched by our experience as immigrants existing in this moment and place in history. We feel a lot of people can relate to the archetype of the traveler, the wanderer.” On Blissing Hour, that motion is felt in every step forward.
Gemini will be released on February 13th. Pre-order the new album here.
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The post “Joy is Resistance” — South American Post-Punks Pilgrims Share Video for “Blissing Hour” appeared first on Post-Punk.com.

