22 Apr 2014

Q&A with Debashish Bhatacharya

Q. Your album Beyond the Ragasphere features several guests; jazz guitarist John McLaughlin and bluegrass musician Jerry Douglas among others. What was it like collaborating with these great musicians?
A. It was full of challenges, musical and artistic, working over seas, coordinating with different time zones , real time studio to studio - composed each number and arranging keeping in mind my collaborators' musical repertoire- not easy, OMG! But you know I did it - with success.

Q. How important is it for you to collaborate with musicians from different musical cultures?
A. I want to share things with other musicians as well as learn and act creating a new territory of music. Living on the edge. If you see my albums I did only exclusive collaboration albums and each one is different- except one Indian raga music album of my own. Collaboration is an exercise between knowledge plus taste plus culture of music and awareness of artistic challenge to recreate something tasteful, enjoyable and attractive. In collaboration you can't hide.

Q. Are there any musicians you would love to work with?
A. Jerry Douglas, Tomani Daibete, Ustad Zakir Hussain, Bela Flek, John McLaughlin and Pandit Shiv Kumar Sharma, Jake Shimbokuru, top Irish Celtic musicians, as well with The Philharmonic Orchestra of London. And with my Hawaiian band.

Q. You have your daughter Anandi with you in the band. What is that like?
A. Working with her is great fun, she is very composed and super talented... She knows me musically very very well - you will see that on stage.

Q. How do you enjoy playing for e British audience?
A. I think UK audience is one of the best so far I've experienced in 30 years of traveling the world.

Q. You play the lap steel guitar, an instrument associated with Hawaii and US country music. How did you come to play this in India?
A. My musical parents and their ancestors never played any instrument - they were all singers, my father got a Hawaiian guitar from a friend before I was born. I got it in hand at the age three and loved the sound and till today the relationship is uninterrupted, musical and loving. I’m trained in Indian classical music and used the lap steel guitar to express my art as lap steel guitar is closest to human voice - it's a singing instrument. But it was hard on me; in order to achieve the wholesome performing style I had to create at least twenty different things in skill and designing a new lap steel guitar of my own and had to patent it to protect the identity of this newborne instrument. I've had to bring it up to the standard of the classical Indian music instrumentally, technically and most importantly, musically.  I always get to see people talking in India - they can't believe themselves that Raga music can sound so perfect in the way my guitar makes it sound. It is hard though to make living on playing ragas on guitar in India. But humbly I did it- by taking the hardest way of challenging my ability and feeling responsible - if I didn't do it no one else would.
The Hawaii connection: I've researched the route and the musicians responsible for bringing Hawaiian music and guitars to India and found them: in 2004 I met Tau Moe and his daughter Dorian Moe who was born in Calcutta. I honoured him with playing a full concert just for him in his village Laie before he passed away. I since recorded a full length album with Hawaiian musicians and played their Hawaiian steel guitars. This made the full circle from the Hawaiian to the Indian guitar. (For ranges of my guitar refer to debashishguitar.com)


Q. Can you say something about some of the music you will play on the tour – are the songs traditional or contemporary
A. It's a journey of my musical life traditional to contemporary. Raga to Beyond the RagaSphere.

Q. Who are your musical influences?
A. Nature , beauty, painting, perfume, food; my parents, my grand father,Ustad Allauddin Khan, Pandit Ravi Shankar Ustad Ali Akbar, Ustad Alla Rakha, Pandit Kishan Maharaj, Pt Nikhil Banerjee, Ustad Vilayat Khan, Ustad Bade Ghulam Ali Khan , Ustad Ameer Khan, Pt Shiv Kumar Sharma and Pt Brij Bhushan Kabra and many others. B.B.King, Ray Charles, Paco De Lucia, African music from Mali, Blue Grass, Hawaiian melody, Chinese pentatonic music, Irish music, Mozart, Bach and other Western classical composers, folk music of Eastern Europe - all influenced, awakened and helped me to understand what actually music is and what it does to the performer and audience and helped me to stand where I'm today.

17 Apr 2014

Next on tour...

... slide guitar magician Debashish Bhattacharya & his Calcultta Chronicles band.


10 Apr 2014

What the audience says: Mokoomba!

Mokoomba are sounding amazing tonight @yorkearlymusic! People are up and dancing

Phenomenal evening @CambJunction Mokoomba were bursting full of creativity & artistry which belies their tender years. #legendsinthemaking

Mokoomba were incredible as usual at RichMixLondon tonight. Big love!

The most amazing night [with] Mokoomba. Never seen so many happy people in one room.

Mokoomba made me smile and dance all night at RichMix tonight. You really are one of the best live acts around at the moment.

The Sage Gateshead wove its magic again last night - STUNNING gig in Hall 2 - joyous music, people of all ages, shapes and colour dancing...

Still feeling full of energy after a fantastic night dancing to Mokoomba @CambJunction - they never disappoint!

Fantastic night with Mokoomba in York - we danced the night away Be sure to catch them in Bury tonight!!

You were awesome in London...totally coming to check you out in Brighton too!

Amazing night thanks for the dancing and the fire. That's some voice you got there. Loved it. 

Man... Mokoomba were so good. If you get the chance go see them while they're in the country.

Guys, that gig was up there with the best nights of African dance music I have ever enjoyed - you have absolutely cracked it, and the next album will prove it!

Great to see Mokoomba in York tonight - love those Zimbabwe rhythms!!

AMAZING gig by Mokoomba tonight at RichMix London - boogieing my socks off! :-) incredible musicianship, tight harmonies and slick moves!

Fantastic performance from Mokoomba tonight - great crowd and fun dancing! Amazing, go see them!

These guys are just so excellent. I had the best time ever. Thanks so much for making me happy.

Enjoyed the wonderful Mokoomba this evening at RichMixLondon! Great live music.

What a great night at RichMix w/ Mokoomba, freshest band from Zimbabwe - incredible rhythms, voices to fill a desert, energy to burst.

Amazing Mokoomba loved every moment.

Thanks to @Mokoomba for bringing music and camaraderie to @CambJunction last night!

Now on stage Mokoomba Live at RichMix. Enjoying every minute of their Acoustic Set !!!!

Wow, a mind blowing gig from Mokoomba tonight!

Thank you to @Mokoomba for their amazing show tonight. Catch them on the last few days of their tour if you can.

Wonderful gig in Bristol last night. Even better than when you were here [last time]! Keep it up - and hope to see you here again soon.

You were amazing!!!Come back soon please!!!
 
If you haven't seen Mokoomba live pick a date here and do it. Go on do it. These boys are incredible.

Just seen Mokoomba at the Sage - words cannot express how boss they are.

An x'lent nite of African music @LighthousePoole particularly encore with funde'ish drum.

You guys were awesome at the Sage tonight, please come again soon.

Mokoomba are sounding amazing tonight @yorkearlymusic! People are up and dancing.

My first event @sage_gateshead and what a cracker!!! Wonderful sound & operformance by Mokoomba.

Had the privilege of watching Mokoomba today, they were tight, disciplined and great musicians, enjoyed myself and Trust Samende was killin! loved the guitar and bass tune.....crazy!!

Great night of Zimbabwean rhythms and energy from Mokoomba at @CambJunction tonight...check them out....

Mokoomba rocked the Rich Mix tonight...niiiice!
Had a fantastic time @sage_gateshead last night.

Seriously good music!

Exceptional presence and invigorating talent...

Mokoomba played an excellent set at Rich Mix last night.

Amazing show from Mokoomba last night in Pontardawe. X

This is the third time we've been to see you! Are you going to sing our favourite a capella song on Saturday night?? Would be brilliant if you could even if it does make us cry!!! See you Saturday!

Great concert in Bristol.

Amazing gig last night @Colston_Hall - Mokoomba are awesome. Well worth a look.

Mokoomba were excellent on Sunday night at the Brighton studio theatre, would love to be dancing to their music right about now!

Mokoomba live at Rich Mix London. (photo: Katerina Pavlakis)

9 Apr 2014

Live review: Mokoomba at Rich Mix London


Versatile Sounds from the House of Stone Fill The Rich Mix
by Lennon Mhishi
photo: Daniele Sbrisny



Considering the general coverage that most African issues receive, especially Zimbabwe, in the past decade, Mokoomba is one of the good news stories that should certainly be shared, and that shows that there is always more to people and places than what is predominantly reported on.

I saw Mokoomba perform for the first time as part of the SOAS Concert Series in the Brunei Gallery in October of 2012. I had been introduced to their music by a friend in South Africa, and they were a pleasant surprise, although I had not heard them talked about. Since then, the band has grown in stature, and gone on to win the Best Newcomer Award of Songlines Magazine, perform at the Harare International Festival of the Arts (HIFA), featured on BBC and to tour many countries all over the world. In many ways, they are part of a new sound coming out of Zimbabwe, and I have even heard whispers that they might even be the 'new' Bhundu Boys! There is no doubt that they can scale heights.

My desire to understand their music, coupled with my research interests in Zimbabwean music an performance spaces saw me follow them to the Jazz Café in Camden in 2013, and they did not disappoint either. When I walked into Rich Mix this time around, on the 1st of April, maybe I was not expecting a lot because I thought now I knew the songs and the sound, and because the show was on a Tuesday, I expected less people.

I was in for a surprise. The standing space was filling up, and the red and blue hues of the lights in the place gave it this cosy yet expectant and exciting air. When the music came, it was on another notch, well surpassing my expectations. The energy and versatility of the band, manifest in the dances and the straddling and fusion of different musical styles, was infectious, and had the crowd dancing through the sets. Away from their usual Afro-fusion, Mokoomba performed an acoustic set that mixed musical varieties such as imbube, reminiscent of Ladysmith Black Mambazo, and the use of languages such as Shona, Tonga, Luvale and Nyanja, as one of the band members, Abundance Mutori pointed out.

Mokoomba, through such performance, has also brought to the fore the rich linguistic diversity of Zimbabwe, as even I, as a Zimbabwean, have been predominantly exposed to Shona and Ndebele. Their musical and linguistic versatility is evidence of the vast cultural potential of music and performance. From conversations I have had, Mokoomba has become part of a larger Zimbabwean musical repertoire, and a musical rallying point of pride and belonging for some Zimbabweans in the diaspora. Lead singer Mathias Muzaza asks, “Vekumusha muriko here uko?” which loosely translates into asking if those from home are there.

It would be apt to expect that in the near future, the Mokoomba sound can only become richer, and we shall be talking of the rise and rise, and continued rising of the band. One hopes Zimbabwe will also rise with them!
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House of Stone: From the Great Zimbabwe/Dzimbabwe where the name Zimbabwe comes from, which can be translated to mean 'house of stone'.