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Here’s What Went Down At Bhutan’s First-Ever International Rock Festival

Asia Rock Fest hosted the likes of Parikrama, South Korean act Cotoba, Thailand band Poomjit, Japanese trio Paranoid Void and more

Jan 05, 2026
Rolling Stone India - Google News

Parikrama live at Asia Rock Fest in Paro, Bhutan on Dec. 20, 2025. Photo: Shiv Ahuja for Rolling Stone India

Set in the Paro valley, where prayer flags usually outnumber guitar cables, Asia Rock Fest 2025 — Bhutan’s first rock festival — felt like the start of something radical.

Unfolding over two days on Dec. 19 and 20, 2025, at Paro Football Club’s arena, Asia Rock Fest brought together bands from Thailand, Japan, South Korea, Bhutan, and India. In a country often described through stillness and ritual, the festival revealed a side of Bhutan that rarely travels.

Eight out of 12 bands were local, with international bands including New Delhi’s hard rock/heavy metal favorites Parikrama, Japanese instrumental act Paranoid Void, South Korean math-rock act Cotoba and Thailand rock act Poomjit.

The Bhutan bands ploughed through a curious mix of English covers and original material in their native tongue, Dzongkha. Dressed in traditional robes and rocking out to everything from The Weeknd to AC/DC, the styles ranged from hard rock to alternative rock to pop.

Amid -1°C temperatures at night, you could see frost slowly gather on amplifiers, but there was a warmth in the community vibe of the Bhutanese festival that kept it going. Bands like North H, Jimi N The Velvet, Backbeads, Sangay Lhaden Band, and more stepped up, and both on and off stage, the bands were buzzing with an enthusiastic goal to grow live music in the country.

Parikrama, for their part, brought a high-adrenaline set, playing their own songs as well as a few amped-up covers like AC/DC’s “Highway To Hell” to close the inaugural edition of Asia Rock Fest.
Although organizers were prepping for a bigger turnout at Paro FC’s arena, the infrastructure showed that they were decently equipped for large-scale concerts. It helps that Asia Rock Fest is funded by Bhutan’s Department of Media, Creative Industry & Intellectual Property, which in turn received financial assistance from the Indian government’s Economic Stimulus Programme to boost the creative industry of Bhutan.

Photos: Shiv Ahuja for Rolling Stone India

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