Making music is part of being human: Susheela Raman

By IANS | Published: August 18, 2022 08:03 AM2022-08-18T08:03:04+5:302022-08-18T08:30:07+5:30

New Delhi, Aug 18 Like other South Indian diaspora kids whose uprooted parents wanted them to retain something ...

Making music is part of being human: Susheela Raman | Making music is part of being human: Susheela Raman

Making music is part of being human: Susheela Raman

New Delhi, Aug 18 Like other South Indian diaspora kids whose uprooted parents wanted them to retain something of their heritage, she may have started learning Carnatic music as a child. However, her teenage years meant that Susheela Raman could not connect with it anymore... It was old R&B, Motown, and getting touched by the great African-American female artists like Bille Holiday, Aretha Franklin, Nina Simone.

"I was also drawn to old blues like Howlin' Wolf and Skip James as well as 60s psychedelic rock like the Doors, Jimi Hendrix and the Beatles. I formed a band when I was 16- years - old and we used to perform covers of all the above. My parents were quite shocked when told that I was going to do concerts at local venues. However, looking back now, they were quite accepting and did not stand in my way, allowing me space to follow my curiosity in music," she tells .

Raman, who moved back to London, where she was born, in her early 20's rediscovered a new passion for music from the subcontinent. Particularly struck by the sound of qawwali as Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan had begun to become known in the west, she was fascinated by the work of British Indian artist, Sheila Chandra who combined Indian rhythmic and melodic ideas with English folk influences. "It helped set me on my own peculiar musical journey experimenting, combining Western and Indian influences," remembers the singer.

Someone who has been doing striking conceptual work for years now with her life and musical partner Sam Mills since 1997, says that it has been during this time that was able to reimagine the Carnatic songs of her youth which provided the bedrock for the first album 'Salt Rain' alongside songs they wrote ourselves. "'Salt Rain' was released in 2001 to significant acclaim. In the end, my parents were very happy and proud that those musical adventures had found an audience," she smiles.

Talk to the singer, who performed with Kanai Das Baul as part of 'I Believe Art Matters', an initiative by Teamwork presented by Sheela Kanoria Foundation, about her enchanting 'Ghost Gamelan' film series which was a recording, live and film project which began in 2015 after a trip to Indonesia and ran up until the pandemic put a lid on travelling, and she says that hearing Gamelan music in that country was otherworldly and magical.

"We fell in love with these beautifully dissonant-sounding metallic orchestras. We ended up in Solo in Central Java and it was intriguing to discover that the South Indian connection with Javanese culture runs deep. We met some excellent music who experiment with music as a way of life and worked a new style of working with this music combining our own songs

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