Bobby Bluebell: Pop’s nearly man on when music was young at heart


THERE’S a story Robert Hodgens – aka Bobby Bluebell – likes to tell about when he first went to London in 1982. Having left Glasgow and all his pop star mates – Clare Grogan and Edwyn Collins and anyone else who hung out in the Rock Garden and had a record contract – behind, he found himself in a very similar scene in London. Only now he was hanging out with Kevin Rowland and Paul Weller and Siobhan Fahey from Bananarama, who also just so happened to be Hodgens’s girlfriend.

This was at a time when any self-respecting pop star was expected to dress for the part. Hodgens hadn’t seen the memo, though.

“I remember being in The Mud Club, or somewhere like that,” Hodgens is telling me. “I was sitting there with my duffel coat on and they’ve all got their Robin Hood suits or velvet pantaloons on and looking like Louis XIV. I remember Siobhan saying, ‘That guy’s just said, “Who’s the weirdo in the corner?”’ She said, ‘That’s my boyfriend.”’

“I remember thinking – ‘F***, I’m the weirdo.’” He laughs. The laugh becomes a cough. He recovers and then adds: “But I’ve always been the weirdo.”

December 2022 and Hodgens has dragged himself out of his sick bed to sit in a Glasgow bar and talk to me about then and now, feuds and fancies, old girlfriends and new opportunities. Even in his flu-weakened state he’s grand company, full of stories and good humour and maybe the odd grudge he’s held onto for 40 years and counting.

READ MORE: A journey with the Spandau Ballet ghosts

He would probably be still recognisable to all those Louis XIVs. His sartorial choices haven’t changed much, the hair is still full of curl and bounce and while there may be a few more lines on his face these days the wit and the sharp tongue remain intact even when he’s feeling a bit under the weather.

We don’t really need an introduction, do we? Bobby Bluebell, songwriter, raconteur and pop star, someone who has been writing songs for four decades but who, he admits himself, is best remembered for a handful of songs he made in the early to mid-1980s when his band were the then sound of young Scotland.

The Bluebells were the nearly men of Scottish pop in that decade, their singles not quite making it to the top until – years after they had originally split up – a TV ad sent Young at Heart, co-written with Fahey, to number one and the band back into the Top of the Pops studio. In the years since, Hodgens has worked with everyone from Sinead O’Connor to Sharleen Spiteri, B*witched to Brian Wilson. Not bad, really, for “the weirdo in the corner”.

In 2023, though, things have kind of come full circle. Because March sees the release of a new Bluebells album, only their second ever (compilations don’t count), a follow-up to Sisters originally released in 1984.

The Bluebells in the 21st Century is both the title of the album and a promise. At the start of February the band – original members Hodgens and Ken and David McCluskey, joined by “Campbell from Aztec Camera” (Campbell Owens), Douglas MacIntyre and Mick Slaven – will be playing Oran Mor, not as an act of nostalgia but as a fully functioning band with a record to promote.

“If we were the Bluebells starting out now, at the same age, this is pretty much the record we would make … If I was 18 in 2022,” Hodgens explains, twisting the time lines as he does so.

Bobby Bluebell with Clare Grogan of Altered Images (Image: free)

It’s a reboot. In the past the band has done the nostalgia circuit, played the Rewind festivals.

“I don’t think we’ll do them again,” Hodgens says. “The money’s really great. You do the four songs and it’s great to meet Nick Hayward and the Beat guys. It’s like doing Top of the Pops. It’s fun.

“But eventually that’s strangely not fulfilling.”

No, he says, The Bluebells are now fully fixed on the 21st century. This is their time.

Well, what other time is there?

“Everyone gets better the older they get,” Hodgens argues. “No-one gets worse, I don’t think. It’s almost impossible if you’re a painter or a writer or a musician to get worse at it. How could you not think, ‘I know how to do this’?”

It’s good to hear his enthusiasm and appetite for the present. Of course, I’ve come along because I really want to ask him about the past, about the time he was living with Bananarama and hanging around the Rock Garden back in the day. He’s good enough to oblige me.

READ MORE: Lola Lennox on growing up with Scots pop superstar Annie as her mum

The third of four sons, Robert Hodgens was born on the Govan Road to a Scottish father and an Italian mother, “a mixed marriage”, as they used to call it. “My dad never once mentioned religion at all. His family, I found out later, were an Orange family from Northern Ireland. My aunts and uncles were fantastic, brilliant people, really great to us. They took me to Rangers a few times.

“I remember going to school and my pals going, ‘What did you go and see Rangers for? You’re a Catholic.’ It was the first time I ever heard the word Catholic. The school was called Our Lady of Lourdes. That should have been a clue. But at six or seven your brain is not thinking in that way at all.

“I told my dad and he said, ‘Well, you’d better go and see Celtic then.’ And I’ve been a supporter ever since.”

He has the inevitable Old Firm story to tell. He first met former Rangers chief executive Martin Bain when the latter was a model and hanging out in the Warehouse Cafe in Glassford Street.

“I don’t know how he ended up being managing director of Rangers, but he did. He said, ‘Do you want to bring your dad along to meet Willie Woodburn? You told me he was your dad’s hero. Come to the game.’”

Father and son duly went to the game. “Of course, it was the full works. Director’s box, dinner, trophy room, the whole thing.

“And then at half time, the tannoy announces, ‘As part of the anti-bigotry campaign Glasgow Rangers are happy to invite Bobby Bluebell and his father to the game. Bobby’s a well-known Celtic supporter.’”

It is fair to say the crowd did not take this information gracefully. Soon the chants began. “Bobby Bluebell, you’re a w***er,” was possibly one of the kinder ones.

“My dad’s on his feet. ‘He’s no a f****** wanker.’ Hodgens recalls. “And he goes, ‘Get your coat, we’re going.’

“He goes downstairs to the bar. ‘Bring us the bill, we’re leaving.’

“‘Mr Hodgens, there’s no bill. You’re a guest of the club.’

“And my dad goes, ‘Two whiskies.’”

During family parties, Hodgens would be wheeled out to sing either Bachelor Boy or Val Doonican’s Walk Tall. He’d try to hear the latest pop songs through the static on Radio Luxembourg and started buying ex-jukebox singles from the local cafe.

He didn’t have a burning desire to be in a band. That came later. But as a teenager he loved going to gigs. He even started a fanzine so he would have an excuse to get in for free. And he began to meet other future pop stars. He started hanging around with Orange Juice who would be hugely helpful in the early days of The Bluebells.

“I wish I was still friends with Edwyn [Collins]. I was with him at the concert at Kelvingrove [last year] but I don’t think he remembered much about me. It’s not his fault.

“We had an argumentative period when we were both in the charts in the 1980s. I used to think, ‘Why is he slagging me off all the time? I’ve never slagged him off?’ And then I just thought I’ll slag him back.”

It’s very Glaswegian, isn’t it? That mixture of affection and sniping. Perhaps it’s because the Glasgow music scene was such a small field back then.

“My best friend Paul … I used to fancy his sister Dorothy. And her best friend was Kate Grogan, whose sister was Clare. They said, ‘Clare’s going to be in a band.’ I went to their first gig in the Mars Bar. I was going to the Mars Bar a lot and I always had the fanzine cover; I realised that could get me into any gig and it was an excuse to be on your own if you’re insecure – and I spent most of my adolescence being insecure I thought I had big ears, big nose.”

Altered Images offered Hodgen’s band a support slot at the Bungalow in Paisley. At that point they were called the Oxfam Warriors. (The first official Bluebells gig was at the Rock Garden.)

Over the years Hodgens has continued to work with Altered Images’ Johnny McElhone, writing songs for Texas. “That’s a remarkable achievement. I met him in 1979,” he points out. He also contributed to Clare Grogan’s recent Altered Images album Mascara Streakz.

But London was calling.

Hodgens always speaks of Siobhan Fahey with huge fondness. “I remember thinking she was such a star. I remember we played New York and Madonna came to see us. We were signed to Seymour Stein’s Sire Records and he had just signed her. She was the cloakroom girl at Danceteria. I don’t think she had even made a record when she came to see us and I remember thinking her whole look is straight from Siobhan.”

How did he meet Fahey? Via a message in Smash Hits, it seems.

“I really fancied her right. It was Shy Boy, the picture sleeve. And the song’s great too. And for a laugh I was getting interviewed by Smash Hits – I think it was maybe David Hepworth – I said, ‘Put in that I really fancy Siobhan’. I knew fine well that she would see it. And sure enough, a few days later, we were playing in Regent’s Park and there she was in the front row with her pal.”

Smash Hits as the 1980s pop equivalent of Tinder.

“And after I went to meet her and I said, ‘We’d better hurry up, I’ve got to go back to Glasgow.’ And she was just taken aback by the sheer cheek of it. But I did move down pretty soon afterwards.”

Into a flat which Fahey shared with the other members of Bananarama, Keren Woodward and Sara Dallin.

“It was like that Help film. Siobhan said, ‘Whatever you do, just stay in this room. Don’t go out.’ And it was like this for a few days like I’m sort of a guilty secret.”

At this point he comes out with the line that makes the 1980s-obsessed teen I was purr with pleasure.

“I remember one day they were going to play The Belle Stars at netball …”

It takes me a minute to catch up with what he’s saying as I’m too entranced by the idea of Bananarama running attacking drills against The Belle Stars.

“So I’m sitting there and Sarah and Keren were asked by a journalist, ‘Does Siobhan have a boyfriend?’ And Keren said, ‘Unbelievably we think it’s that guy over there,’ pointing at me.

“And then when it came out in a magazine they both said, ‘That sounded terrible.’ And I genuinely believe they didn’t mean it. I’m still really good friends with those girls. They are great girls. And Siobhan is a fantastic person, but at that point Siobhan really wanted to write songs and I was being heavily touted as an up-and-coming songwriter and she had an affinity with Scotland. Sometimes you just hit it off with someone. We’re still friends to this day.”

Oh, and because I know you need to know, Bananarama won the game.

One would think that dating one of the country’s most beautiful pop stars might change your sense of self. But Hodgens doesn’t think it did. That insecurity didn’t go away. He recalls a night in Birmingham when they all got invited down to the Rum Runner by Duran Duran.

Hodgens ended up sitting next to John Taylor, “who is one of the best-looking guys”. Taylor asked him if Fahey had a boyfriend. “And I’m going, ‘Yeah, I’m her boyfriend.’ He goes, ‘Is she single?’ Just totally ignoring everything I’m saying. ‘I’m going to go and ask her.’ And he comes back, ‘Nah, she’s got a boyfriend.’ ‘I know …’

“Everybody was chatting her up,” he recalls. Even Fahey’s soon-to-be husband Dave Stewart of Eurythmics fame

“When Dave phoned her up to be in the Who’s That Girl? video I knew right away … He also asked Kim Wilde and Clare. He was just hedging his bets.”

Stewart was to play a huge part in the next stage of Hodgen’s career. Because The Bluebells never quite became pop stars themselves until Young at Heart went to number one long after the first incarnation of The Bluebells had ended as a going concern.

By then Hodgens was a songwriter for hire. “That’s all down to Dave Stewart. Dave’s got a fantastic gift for that. He took me everywhere. If he was in LA or Cannes, ‘You’re coming.’” The two of them would end up in rooms with the likes of Tom Petty or Quincy Jones and Stewart would pipe up: “Bob’s got a song.” Whether Hodgens did or not. “The first thing you learn is you just make something up and he’ll join in and it will sound fantastic. There were downs as well as ups. “I went through not a great period where you are on your own. I did B*witched and things like that. You see the record and there are nine names on it and I’ve not met any single one of them. I didn’t even meet the girls.

“Then you end up working with people like Sinead O’Connor. My God, I don’t think I’ve met anyone as talented as that girl in my whole life. To this day – until Sharleen – I’ve never heard a voice that powerful.

“I really get it now. You can write a song and it’s not really a song until it’s sung.

“I like singing my own songs, but when you hear someone like Sharleen singing something you’ve worked on … Sinead O’Connor … It’s emotion 100 per cent, all the time.”

Who would he like to work with that he hasn’t? “I know it sounds really daft but people like Taylor Swift and especially Paolo Nutini and Lewis Capaldi. I know Capaldi’s got a great team but could he sing a fast song? Imagine him singing Pump it Up by Elvis Costello.”

These days Bobby Bluebell is 63 years old and is the father of two. He has spent his life making records or playing records as a DJ. Like the album title says, in the 21st century The Bluebells are a going concern again. And maybe they’re more united than ever.

“Bands are never a democracy but they don’t survive unless they become a democracy,” Hodgens says. “What’s the point of having a band unless they make you better? And there’s no doubt in my mind that Ken and David make me better and I make them better.”

What is this? Not an ending. That’s for sure. He’s certain about that.

The Bluebells play Oran Mor in Glasgow on Friday. Their new album The Bluebells in the 21st Century comes out in April



The K Arun Prakash Interview: ‘My style is to highlight the composition and the singer, silence automatically happens’


The rendition of raga Bhairavi by the reclusive Kerala musician Thamarakkad Govindan Namboothiri at the beautiful open-air theatre of Indira Ranganathan Trust at Alwarpet in Chennai recently was probably what the great MD Ramanathan had once referred to as “muzhukkappu”, the ritualistic offering in Kerala temples in which the idol gets covered with sandal paste from head to toe. He had said that handling a raga was like doing a “muzhukkappu” — you have to do it very slowly and devotedly as a meditative process.

What was on display that day was the slow, detailed and painstaking process of presenting the essence of the raga and the composition than mere singing. A composition that you have heard innumerable times suddenly starts showing soul-stirring details which you feel a little fearful to explore even as a listener. Those are precise, deep, sometimes painful, details that only a renouncer can attempt.

Thamarakkadu’s punctilious journey couldn’t have been possible without K Arun Prakash on the mridangam. The languid and captivating “layam” that Arun Prakash helped create around Thamarakkad’s music was gripping, aesthetic and technically balanced. And what emerged that evening was probably what Andrei Tarkovsky would call “sculpting in time”. It was an abstract portrait of not only the raga and the composition, but also the idea of layam.

My gaze alternated between Arun Prakash and Thamarakkad. There were moments of intensity, moments of silence, the sudden spurt of sound and rhythmic formations, lazy waltzes, abrupt stoppages and so on. Clearly, Thamarakkad couldn’t hide his joy about the resonance between his voice and that of Arun Prakash’s mridangam. Can somebody write poetry with percussion?

That is Arun Prakash! Very unique in any part of the world.

Among all the mridangists of the contemporary generation, Arun Prakash has always been exceptionally amusing to watch, primarily because of the poetic fluidity of his style and the interplay between sound and silence that he creates. Sometimes slow lone gentle strokes and long pauses, sometimes just some gumkis, and sometimes riveting grooves that accelerate like a sports car without over-speeding, and sometimes strokes that sound like perfectly-timed syncopations. And the most beautiful aspect is that the kalapramanam (tempo) remains the same throughout, with metronomic precision. Arun Prakash’s percussion is sheer poetry in motion.

In Carnatic music, Arun Prakash is one of those few mridangists who play for the song – both the lyrics and the raga. Coming from the great Palani Subramania Pillai school of mridangam, both philosophically and technically, the approach is not alien to him because his guru MN Kandaswamy Pillai, was one of the foremost torchbearers of the Palani style. However, what we see in him now is a style that’s unique to him. It has evolved over the years since he began playing at the age 11. Today, his style is an all-encompassing idiom by itself. Almost like the art of making mandala painting by Tibetan monks.

Raised in an eclectic atmosphere of music, Arun Prakash’s entry into the world of mridangam was accidental. His father, L Krishnan was a carnatic musician and composer at All India Radio (AIR). A disciple of the legendary musician GN Balasubramaniam, he has composed music for innumerable albums sung by Bombay Sisters, Dr. M. Balamurali Krishna, Vani Jairam and so on. During one of his many visits to the AIR as a young boy, Arun Prakash randomly played some strokes on one of the mridangams lined up in the music room. Even before his father could stop him, MN Kandaswamy Pillai walked in. He too was an artiste at the AIR.

“Who played the mridangam?,” he asked.

Even as his father was about to say sorry for his son’s playfulness, Kandaswamy Pillai asked, “Is he learning from anybody?”. Kandaswamy Pillai had noticed that Arun Prakash was playing with his left hand.

“I am planning to send him to you,” said his father, although at home there was never a talk about learning any instrument. “Even till date I don’t know why my father said that,” says Arun Prakash.

“Bring him home on Sunday” Kandaswamy Pillai said.

And that’s how his journey into the world of percussion began.

When he reached Kandaswamy Pillai’s home on Sunday, he saw a big mandapam for Palani Subramania Pillai, where Pillai sat near his guru’s photo. Since that day, “I never sat on a chair because it was like a temple,” Arun Prakash reminisces. Kandaswamy Pillai was his only guru. “He didn’t take a single pie from me as fee.”

Arun Prakash started playing at the age of 11 in 1979. He still remembers his first concert with Mandolin Srinivas, who was a year older. He also vividly remembers TM Krishna’s first concert at the Music Academy as a young boy for which he played the mridangam, and the many concerts that he played for Sanjay Subrahmanyan since the latter was just 18. Then on, he has played for almost all the major musicians of the past and present such as TN Seshagopalan, KV Narayanaswamy, DK Jayaraman, DK Pattammal, T N Krishnan, VV Subramanyam, Lalgudi Jayaraman, TV Sankaranarayanan, TK Govinda Rao, Sanjay Subrahmanyan, Dr. S Sowmya, Ranjani Gayatri, TM Krishna, Amritha Murali, Ramakrishnan Murthy, Bharat Sundar, Ritwik Raja, Vignesh Eshwar, Aiswarya Vidya Raghunath, Brinda Manickavasakan and so on. As seen in many concerts by TM Krishna, Suguna Varadachari, Vedavalli and Amritha Murali, he makes a great duo with violinist Shriram Kumar.

Excerpts from an interview with Arun Prakash in Chennai

Since you have the most unique style of percussion in Carnatic music, let’s start with that. How did it evolve like this?

I have been playing the mridangam for the last 43 years and in the present style for probably 20-25 years. I think the change was gradual. In the first phase of my career, I had been playing what was expected of a mridangist. However, somewhere in the middle of my career, I started thinking that I should go with the “raga-sound” of the Krithi, not the tala; and at the next level, that of the lyric. I started analysing both of these because fundamentally I am a lover and analyst of music. That’s how the change began.

Since I also compose and sing a bit, I generally look at how a composition is structured and how the melodic, rhythmic phrases and the lyrics go hand in hand. My idea is to highlight the composition and the artist who sings the composition. So, when I started playing like that, fortunately or unfortunately a lot of silence also came into my style since silence embellishes the music. Sometimes more than the sound.

So, it just started like that?

One of those days, when violinist Shriram Kumar and I were talking about music, he appreciated the way I was playing and suggested that I could pay more attention to the lyrics and see if I could do something more than a regular mridangist. He said if I appreciated the lyrics more, I would be able to enjoy the music more. It was just a general remark and he didn’t ask me to modify my style or anything. Probably that could have triggered the change, that could have made me think differently. And, now I cannot think of playing in any other way.

Was the change gradual?

Yes, it was gradual and I guess it’s still changing. There are many more things to learn in the lyrics as well as the melodic structure even now. For instance, the other day, while I was playing the Bhairavi swarajathi (the concert by Thamarakkad Govindan Namboodiri), knowing the length of the krithi helped. I knew that if I started playing everything in the beginning itself, I was going to repeat myself over and over again for the remainder of the krithi. Therefore, I decided to paint a different portrait along with the musical sound of Namboothiri’s song and Shriram Kumar’s violin, who incidentally knew the krithi inside out. So, I thought I would have to accompany both. The structuring of the melody and the lyric is a gradual step-by-step process. The kriti slowly builds up into a climax in my opinion. So, my plan was to develop rhythmic syllables and slowly build it up as the krithi presented its true big self. That’s how I played that day.

This might not happen for the same swarajathi on another day. I may get some other ideas. As you know, these are spontaneous. The way a musician sings and starts the kalapramanam (tempo) is also a deciding factor. For a kalapramanam like that of Namboothiri, I would want to space out the music by the rhythm and make it more comfortable to listen to. More importantly, when I play, I also want to ensure that the lyrics are heard well. There are instances when one has to be soft and others, when one has to be hard. Many people tell me that I play softly, which is not true. In my opinion, I play quite aptly!

When you say “playing to the lyric”, are you referring to the raga as well?

Yes, it’s like multi-tasking. When we play like that, I think the song gets highlighted and in the process, the musician too gets highlighted.

But what will happen if your sub-accompanists don’t get what you are doing?

Sometimes it can be difficult. So, I generally play with percussionists who are used to my style. However, even people who are new to my style easily pick up the change when I start playing and adjust accordingly. That’s usually how it works when I play outside Tamil Nadu with artistes whom I am not very familiar with. I guess I don’t usually have a big problem on that.

Did this style emerge because you are originally from the “Palani School” who’s known for his poetic beauty?

Definitely yes. Basically, Palani style is to embellish or highlight the musician. Madurai Mani Iyer had called him a “Tyagi” (referring to the sacrifice he made to highlight the composition and the musician) and even a candle that burnt itself up to give light to others. That’s definitely my foundation too.

Was your Guru MN Kandaswamy Pillai also like that?

Yes. Very much.

Did he also employ the famous sollkettus from the Palani school?

Yes, even more. But more than the solkettus, the wisdom for what to play where. If you practise a lot of sollus, you may end up playing them indiscriminately wherever you have a chance and you might forget the big picture.

Yeah, some mridangists have a very busy style that makes music less enjoyable

Yes. Many people think I am against sollus, I am not. You can and must play them, but at the right place, at the right proportion. Otherwise, it’s a wasted effort.

So, where do you use them?

Only when it’s required. Probably in Thaniavarthanam or in a fast-paced song. Ultimately, only when the musical sound demands it. The structure of the sollu should compliment the rhythmic gait and melodic gait of the music.

But in concerts, you still don’t speed up beyond a point.

I don’t want to. Some musicians tell me that even if a mridangist starts slow, it will certainly pick up speed at some stage. Fortunately or unfortunately it doesn’t happen with me. In my style, I would love to maintain the kalapramanam (tempo) constant throughout the krithi. You start in any kalapramanam, I will maintain that. If you maintain it throughout a composition, then your kalapramanam is “sudham”. Most often, people start in one tempo and a little later, it will be faster. I am not against it, because we are not machines. Some people do tell me that a little speeding up will only be good, but I don’t want to do that.

So, that means when you accompany them on the mridangam, the singers have to mindfully adjust.

Yes, they will choose a kalapramanam that will be consistent for the entire song. But sometimes, I also go with the wind because some people tend to “go there” and even if we try to pull it back it would be difficult for them. Me forcefully doing that might not be fair to them. As I said before, the basic aim of the mridangist is to keep the main singer and everyone on stage comfortable. For instance, in a Thaniyavarthanam if I play a kuraippu and they are not playing it, I am not going to keep on playing it to expose them. You have to immediately change and go with what they are comfortable.

What about some of those fast singers? Wouldn’t you play with them?

I am ready. I have to get accustomed to that situation. As a mridangist, I have to be equipped to play for all styles.

Won’t you feel uncomfortable?

No, I don’t think so.

You used to play with Sanjay Subrahmanyan for long. Did your styles match?

Yes, they did. His style of singing is more of madhyama kala (medium tempo). When I used to play with him I always loved his proportion in presenting the concert. I am basically a big lover of raga alapanas and I listen to the ragas on stage whoever is the singer. I still can’t forget his raga renderings when I played for him.

By sticking to your unique style, aren’t you restricting yourself to a few musicians these days?

Not really. I believe I should have the ability to accompany every one and still maintain my style.

Who are the regular singers that you play with

Vedavalli Amma, Rama Ravi Mami, Suguna Varadachari Mami, R K Shriram Kumar, TM Krishna, Amrita Murali, Aiswarya Vidya Raghunath, Vignesh Eshwar, Ramakrishnan Murthy and many others. Whoever I play with, I would give my 100 per cent to highlight the music and the musician.

From what I have noticed, you are also very nurturing, particularly towards the younger artistes. In fact both you and violinist RK Shriram Kumar.

Yes, we both try to highlight the composition and the singer. The artistes we play with are singing well. I used to jocularly say that while performing, I will be writing an imposition “they are singing well, they are singing well, they are singing well…” during the entire concert. My aim will be to highlight their music and make people say how beautifully she or he is singing.

The Thamarakkad concert was very special. You both suited each other very well. I heard that he particularly asked for you.

His poise and calmness is very beautiful. I was playing with him for the first time. I haven’t even seen him before.

Who are the Masters that you look up to — both vocal and mridangam?

Palani Subramanya Pillai, C S Murugabhoopathi and Palghat Mani Iyer — the Trinity of mridangam. Of course, also all the great masters because they have paved the path for us. In that path, whatever creativity comes our way, we should employ and create a style.

Since you are originally from the Palani School, what’s that single quality that you imbibe from the Mani Iyer School, which is supposedly quite a different idiom?

The silence. When Mani Iyer plays, he knows where to use silence. The aptness of silence. He never played long Thaniavarthanams like we do today. He was of the view that whatever you want to convey, do it in 15 minutes, 12 minutes or 10 minutes. I like that attitude about him because we are not doing a Thaniyavarthanam concert, it’s just a part of the concert. If it’s a Thaniyavarthanam concert, you can play for 45 minutes or even an hour.

What was the predominant difference between the Palani School and Mani Iyer school?

This question requires a Lec-Dem to answer [laughs]. Both of them had different thought processes when it came to accompaniment and Thaniyavarthanam. I would say both believed in their art and were never insecure which is very important for every artist. Growing up in Palani Anna Bani, it was a delight to listen to his creative support, embellishments and of course his unbelievable korvais. For example, the way he played for GNB, Semmangudi, Madurai Mani Iyer or Alathur Brothers were master classes in mridangam accompaniment.

People say that Palani was a genius and that one can’t play like him. Is it true or is it the typical reverential exaggeration that fans indulge in?

Of course, he was a genius. I think his accompaniment style has not been researched properly. I am planning to listen to a whole recording of Palani anna and give a Lec-Dem as to what he might have thought or what might have come to his mind while playing the mridangam in a concert. There’s a wedding-concert with Semmangudi and TN Krishnan that I want to study.

Palani’s sollkettus were very famous, and they are still famous.

His solkettu lessons are not easy. They are very scientific. That’s the genius of Palani. I think I will have to do a Lec-Dem on that too. His sollkettus are always in tune with the music. Their structuring is not just rhythmic but also musical and hence whatever sollus you put, they won’t sound harsh or unconnected with the music. That was his greatness. It’s a big tradition called the Pudukkottai Bani founded by the great Manpoondia Pillai. Dakshinamoorthy Pillai and Palani Muthiah Pillai were great musicians of that Bani.

Do you use them in your playing

I try.

So people who know Palani style will recognise them

Maybe if I play that correctly (smiles).

Any special treatment to the mridangam to play like the way you do?

No, normal mridangam (smiles). Not yet tried bolt-and-nut mridangams.

I have read or heard somewhere that your change of style might have happened because of a finger injury.

No no, nothing like that (laughs).

Coming back to your style, I find it like minimalism in art. As if there’s an air of Zen to an otherwise reverberating sound. Is this idea of minimalism reflected in your life and approach to art in general too?

Probably yes. I have no excessive desires for anything in life. I have to do a lot in laya and learn more about the kriti structures. That’s my main focus. I hope I don’t waste time (laughs).

Are you a minimalist in aesthetics too?

My interest is not to demonstrate my skills, but how to make the music sound beautiful.

Is the approach same while you compose as well?

Not necessarily. For instance, when I am commissioned to compose music for dance, I would have to go with what the dancer wants. But when I compose for the lyrics, I go by whatever the lyrics demand. Most of my korvais are laya-oriented in the sense that it has to be worked-out and played. You just cannot take it and play it — because for me laya is something that needs to be practised. It’s a big process. My definition of laya is not that easily attainable. Actually, I am not able to play those types of korvais even in my own concerts because that type of laya requires understanding from everyone else around you on stage as well.

Probably that’s why I haven’t seen in your concerts the types of complex korvais that you have presented in your Lec-Dems.

Yes, because I depend on somebody else’s tala to play. If I am dependent on somebody else’s tala, I can’t employ the intricate kind of laya that I usually post on social media.

But can’t you collaborate with some singers and present these Korvais in concerts?

Yes, but they will have to practise my korvais for many days to get 100 per cent grip on the laya. I have been working on laya from 1994-95. (Demonstrates an example in Misra chap tala)

All this high thinking and hard work is alright, but do audiences really understand all this? Do they experientially feel anything different?

I guess some do. Some people do come and tell me that what I play sounds meditative. Some say that although they don’t understand the intricacies of tala, they could feel some orderliness and “correct thing” happening.

You need enormous concentration too, right?

Yes. Very much.

Sounds like unachievable ideals

(Laughs). With passion, respect, hard work and humility towards the art, it’s achievable by everyone. My aim is to show all the possibilities of laya.

I have noticed Jazz drummers also employing our korvai type complex, but groovy, formations. Are they this complex?

Yes, they are complex, but not at this level. They often make cross rhythms and make it sound more complicated. I more importantly like their modulations which are highly aesthetic and musical.

But they don’t sound easy.

Yes, it’s complex and not easy at all because they are not on the beat, they are often off-the-beat and quarter and three-fourth beats etc. At the same time, they will be in perfect laya.

Can you do the off-beat thing on the mridangam too?

Yes, we do it a lot. We do a lot of things like cross-beat etc. The most important thing, however, is where to employ them. Some people might do it when a sober thing is happening. That would clearly sound inappropriate.

You can do those things, probably when a complicated swara pattern is happening. My point is always play what the music demands and play whatever you would wish to during the thaniyavarthanam.

Have you played some of your Korvai compositions in Thaniavarthanams?

Very few because it would put undue demand on the sub-accompanists.

I am not asking for names, but are there musicians that you think won’t suit your style?

Probably yes. There might be people who might not get along well with this kind of playing. For example, long ago, when I was silent during a kriti in an apt place according to me, in a concert the singer gestured to the ghatam player to continue playing. He was accustomed to the non-stop sound of percussion. But the irony was that I was trying to highlight his voice and art and he couldn’t get it (laughs).

In rhythm, are there things or areas that you would want to explore more?

In laya, there are a lot of things that many people, including me, haven’t explored. I am running my Youtube channel mainly with that purpose. If music students and musicians follow and try to do what I am doing, they will get more grip on the tala as well as the laya. If you work hard, you will get an opening into this beautiful world of laya, it’s like a beautiful relationship with a friend.

How do you define the concept of laya to common people?

Laya is pure discipline and beauty.

To make it more specific to music?

Concentration and hard work.

It’s still philosophical, can you elaborate?

Perfect kalapramanam. Nobody has attained it. All musicians are striving towards that.

When I did tisram for nadai Pallavis, I didn’t get it initially. I had to work on it for months. General people don’t do tisram for a nadai pallavi. They do trikalam which is different from tisram for a nadai pallavi. Even when they do, they do tisram for chatusra nadai pallavi. What I mean by nadai pallavi is mainly kanda nadai, misra nadai and sankeerna nadai.

When I tried first, I didn’t get anything at all and it was really annoying to say the least. Another thing was it was also not going to sell. In other words, nobody would say that they would accept you as a musician only if you do tisram in a nadai pallavi. And nobody wants it as well. But you should have the conscience as a musician, don’t you? Once the great musician Balachandar had said this in a Lec-Dem “Why all this struggle? Who would understand all this.” This is how we escape. But we have to have our conscience, don’t we?

As musicians, we are wedded to music and we have to work at all levels — laya, music, neraval, krithis, ragas and so on. You have to sing and see. In the same Lec-Dem, he says, for musicians such as vocalists and instrumentalists, “Music is first and the laya exercise comes second” and hence if you go more into the laya, your music would suffer. But for laya exponents like us — people playing percussion instruments — it’s different, we have to go deeper and deeper. We have to constantly work on it.

What’s your approach to the various aspects of a rendition? Say the compositional part, the neraval, swarams etc?

In terms of the Keerthanam, the kalapramanam decides and I have to highlight the keerthanam. When it comes to neraval, I have to give space because they are going to take a line and explore it to the maximum possible. In keezhkkala (lower tempo) neraval, sometimes you need to accompany with apt gumukis and go along with the music.

Means you don’t play too many formations there.

No, I won’t. You just go with the music and create more space because the lyrics need to be explored for various melodic phrases. When it comes to melkkala (higher tempo) neraval, it becomes more rhythmic which doesn’t mean the earlier phase was less rhythmic. At this stage, you can play apt patterns to support the melody. The same is applicable to swarams as well. For keezhkkala swarams, you shouldn’t play melkkala phrases. My guru used to drill into us at this point often. Some people knowingly or unknowingly do that, but it doesn’t gel. The idea is for the musician to get more of the raga in the neraval and swara. You play accordingly – just go with the music and not play unnecessary sollus. One of the key factors is to anticipate the neraval and swaras based on the melodic structure.

What about compositions that you are not familiar with?

I would go with the raga.

What about the swarams?

You have to be equipped with sarva laghu patterns and kanakku patterns. In kanakku (arithmetic formations) swarams, you have to be ready because you don’t know what they are going to do. You have to be efficient enough by listening to a lot of people playing, and things such as mathematical calculations should be in your mind.

And will the anticipation automatically happen?

Hundred per cent. It has to happen.

Even unknown ragas?

Anything.

What about chittaswarams of compositions that you don’t know?

You can easily play along when they repeat it for the second time. A knowledge of raaga phrases would help too.

How do you memorise the long chittaswarams?

You have to keep listening. Whenever I accept a concert, my style is to ask for their sruthi a few days in advance – as a recording because there are different types of Ds and Es. It’s like asking “what’s your D?” They will sing for two minutes. Then, I would ask for the list of songs that they’ve decided to sing.

So, if somebody plays out of that list, would you get upset?

No, I can still play. But if I know the list, I will have a plan. For instance if there are two Adi tala kritis with the same kalapramanam, I will have a plan to bring in some variety.

Something different means? What will you do?

For instance, depending on the lyrics and melodic structure, I might go with a different gait.

Other than these variations and patterns what else can you do with the mridangam?

You have the Shadjam note on the mridangam; for certain ragas, the Rishabham is also there, not for all. I am not sure if you had noticed, in the concert with Brinda, I ended the Sriragam Krithi with the Ri – It was almost close to the Ri of Sriragam.

I may not have noticed, but I am sure I would have felt good listening to it.

(Laughs). Yes, the listening pleasure certainly increases. It’s very important. Try to be musical, when you can be musical.

Now let’s come to your body of work as a music composer. Among others, you have tuned songs by writer Perumal Murugan and Kerala’s renaissance man Sri Narayana Guru, which I think were significant because it brought contemporary and reformist texts into Carnatic repertoire. How has been your life as a composer?

I like it, in the sense that I like to tune texts according to their meaning and essence. When I did the “Azhiyum Kaattum” (In Malayalam) by Sri Narayana Guru, I took the help of a friend who knew Malayalam to understand the meaning, the diction and the whole essence of it. When I got the sense of the song, all I visualised was a boat (Azhi means sea) at sea. If you listen to that song when you are on a boat, it will be perfect.

Malayalam was not that difficult, but there was this Bharathiyar project in which I had to compose for a verse ‘seppu mozhi padinettudaiyaal enil sindhanai onrudaiyaal’ which was translated into 18 Indian languages, some of which I haven’t even heard of. I had to tune for 18 different lyrics 18 languages. That was a real challenge.

In fact, I was a little afraid after accepting the offer whether I could pull it off. Anuradha Sriram, who knows a lot of languages, was the singer. To familiarise ourselves with the language, she and I took a lot of classes from the people who wrote those texts for the project. Even after recording the songs, the writers came up with corrections in diction etc that we had to incorporate by recording them again.

It was not just about the unfamiliarity with the languages. I also had to go with the nativity of the music in each language. That required quite a bit of research. I also had to use different instruments to reflect the nativity despite budget constraints. Although there was a suggestion to use the keyboard to simulate those instruments because of the limited budget, I didn’t agree. We used original instruments. Another problem was that in most of the places in the North East the common music would sound like Mohanam (pentatonic scale).

Since you mentioned music and their cultural and native contexts and since you are a Carnatic musician, when you listen to music from other cultures and places, do you hear ragas in them? How has been the overall cross-generic listening experience?

Sort of. Sometimes I wouldn’t call it a raga in the carnatic parlance, but a scale. Any music will have a scale. And there are very different scales. From a young age, I have been listening to a lot of various genres of music because of my father. I was exposed not only to Carnatic music, but to many other genres as well. Since my father lived in Delhi, he had heard a lot of ghazals, Hindustani etc. He was also a big film music buff. He used to work with music director Rajeshwara Rao. So, the household music was eclectic. I am a big fan of Ghulam Ali, Mozart, Beethoven etc; but I wouldn’t mix Carnatic with any of these. I was listening to a Mahler Symphony the other day and the first eight bars were unbelievable. The symphony is 80 minutes-long and within the first eight bars, the composer is revealing what’s going to come. It’s like “be prepared, be ready, I am going to give this kind of stuff.”

Do these musical experiences influence your composing?

Yes, 100 per cent. I am also a big fan of movie re-recordings (background score) and Ilayaraja is the “be all and end all” of re-recordings. His re-recordings are unbelievable. It’s not non-stop music. The music has to enter and exit. Both should be perfect.

What’s your core compositional repertoire in Carnatic? I have heard TM Krishna singing your Pallavis.

I have composed a lot of Pallavis and many musicians such as Krishna, P. Unnikrishnan, Ramakrishnan Murthy, Amrita Murali, Bombay Jayashree Vignesh Ishwar, G. Ravi Kiran etc have sung them. Ranjani Gayathri also have sung a lot of my Pallavis.

Oh, I didn’t know that you have played with Ranjani Gayathri. Aren’t your styles different?

Oh yes, a lot. I have played a lot of their recordings as well. I enjoy playing for them a lot.

So, did you change your style when you played with them?

No, in every concert I would try to do my kind of “portrait!!!”

And they didn’t have a problem with that?

No, they appreciated it very much. Actually a friend used to jocularly say “Sir every singer will like your playing, only mridangists will have a problem” because it’s not in accordance with the usual practice (laughs).

What about Thaniavarthanams? I have seen an old video, in which you and Sriram Kumar are also present, where TM Krishna is saying that it doesn’t need to be composition-based.

I have always enjoyed my concerts with Krishna and I would say that he is one of the few evolved musicians around. I love his raga renditions, particularly his kalapramanam in them. In many concerts he has asked me to play rare talas on the spot. I particularly remember a concert in 2012 in Bangalore where he told me that he wouldn’t like me to play the thaniyavarthanam after the kriti and asked me to play in a tala as a stand alone piece. I asked to suggest the tala, but he asked me to choose even that myself. The whole thing happened right on the stage, in front of the audience.

I said that we would ask the audience to choose the tala. Krishna then asked the audience to suggest any thala other than the usual Adi, Roopaka, Mishrachappu and Khandachappu! The suggestion from the audience was “Khanda Dhruvam”. It’s a bit confusing because of its anga structure. Then I asked the person who suggested the tala. “Sir, is it in one kalai or two kalais? “Play it in two kalais” said the person from somewhere at the back. Krishna said “pocheda” (means you are in trouble) and Shriram Kumar asked me “did you ask the kanjira player Guru Prasanna if he could play along?’’. I asked him, and he said he was fine with the idea. He was okay because I would start and he would get about three minutes of my first round to figure it out.

I had to do everything in that thaniyavarthanam — korvais, nadais, koraippus, moharas, farans…and by God’s grace everything came out well.

Why I am telling you this story in detail is because a mridangist should be equipped to play the thani in any tala or any idam, otherwise you should not get on stage. The same is applicable to the violinist as well. For instance, if a singer composes a Pallavi and sings a neraval in raga Naganandini and skips Ri while you go up and Ni while you come down, the violinist cannot say “it’s out of syllabus.” Sanjay and Sowmya also have given me thaniavarthanams in rare talas as a surprise. Musicians such as Chitraveena player Ravi Kiran do impromptu Pallavis on stage. When he himself doesn’t know the pallavi, how can he tell me what he is going to play? But, I still have to play. So you have to be equipped and your mind should be always immersed in music, 24/7. My mind is alway in music. Only then can you meet such challenges. When I was on tour with Ravi Kiran, he always asked me to do thaniavarthanams in challenging talas and eduppus.

But do these things that are challenging to musicians result in audience-appreciation that’s commensurate with your efforts? The question is if complicated stuff translates into good musical experiences.

You have to tell them what you are doing. In my opinion, you have to nurture the audience to the next level of musical experience. Slowly they will follow. I can even see some mridangists slowly following my style.

That’s true. N. Guruprasad on ghatam has become almost like your reflection, particularly when you guys are together.

Yes, when he plays with me he follows me exactly the way I play because we have been playing together for so many years. He himself has told me. He has been able to appreciate the value behind my style. However, I also know that many people might criticise my style saying I am not playing at all, but such comments wouldn’t hinder my creativity.

You would have loved to play with past masters such as MD Ramanathan, wouldn’t you?

Yes, for that poise and calmness, 100 per cent! Once a musician told me that when I play, it’s as if I am telling him “take your time, enjoy and sing”.

Once I had a conversation with a sub-accompanist who told me “You are trying to make the kalapramanam very correct, but sometimes only if you run, you get the interest and response from the audience”. It was about making it faster than actually what it was. Once, when Krishna sang about 50 rounds of swaras continuously in that vintage Semmangudi pattern, I kept the same kalapramanam and Krishna also understood that I was not going to run (speed up). Everything happened in an orderly way. Perfect. Not pushing it, not trying to make it faster, not trying to show something is happening etc. And there was no dip in the response from the audience too. It was the same. If everyone is together, it will have its effect. If you are confused, people will get confused. If you are doing whatever you want to do in a more confident, clear and efficient way, it will definitely reach the audience.

What are the other forms or genres of music that you listen to?

All kinds of music. I love western classical music and I am a very big fan of film music as well. I also analyse film music and love the yesteryears composers in Hindi. I am a huge fan of SD Burman, Madan Mohan and Salil Chowdhury. In fact, they are the “trinity” for me in Hindi film music (laughs). In Tamil, KV Mahadevan, MS Viswanathan, G Ramanathan and of course, Ilaiyaraaja.

Can’t some of the unusual raga phrases that they have used be used in our renditions?

Yes, you can, but the core sound of Carnatic music shouldn’t be compromised. In my humble opinion, Carnatic music has to be “Carnatic”.

Since you mentioned Carnatic sound, I find that excessive Carnatic mannerisms by singers makes a stereotype out of Carnatic music and even deters a lot of people from listening. I mean, it can be a barrier to enjoying music. What do you think?

There has to be a balance. The lyrics have to be clear. MS Subbulakshmi was an epitome of that — the way she pronounced the text in any language. Very few musicians have done that. As you said, many add some mannerisms and make it unclear. In fact, in an interview, Dr M Balamurali Krishna had asked this question: why are people making unnecessary sounds? Some people do it even in the lyrics, thereby making it unclear to listen to. In some songs this ‘Carnatic sound’ sound nice, but in some they are excessive.

Yes. For example, when you are singing a lighter raga, you don’t need to Carnaticise it to the extent of a Todi or Dhanyasi. At the same time, if you don’t sing Carnatic ragas without the core Carnatic style, they will sound too light. When you sing ragas such as Sindhu Bhairavi, Desh etc, you can add a bit of Hindustani touch. There has to be a balance. At the other end of the spectrum, you cannot sing something “ghazalish” and say it’s Carnatic.

Since you mentioned Ghazals, I have noticed that many Carnatic musicians are now trying to sing ghazals on social media.

Ghazals have to be sung like Ghazals. Don’t Carnaticise them (laughs). I would tell them, you do whatever comes to you well. I have heard rasikas saying If I want to listen to a ghazal, why should I go to a Carnatic musician? Each genre is different. For instance, the accents have to be different for Carnatic and film songs.

Some Carnatic musicians sing film music. Do you think they might lose their core flavour if they keep singing a lot of film music because of the latter’s unique demands?

It depends on the individual. As long as you are mindful of the core sound of Carnatic, you will be fine. P. Unnikrishnan is a great example. He doesn’t mix styles while he alternates between Carnatic and film music. When he sings Carnatic ragas, they are perfectly within the Carnatic idiom which I have always admired.

What about falsetto? I have recently started noticing that some Carnatic musicians are appearing to employ falsetto.

It’s sad. That’s all. Our music is open-throated. In that open-throated style, you will have to bring the bass and higher notes. Probably some are shifting to falsetto because in open-throated singing, they might not get the exact sruthi. In open-throated style, to be in perfect pitch you have to really open up. Take the music of Chembai Vaidyanathan Bhagavathar and his pitch perfection in all ranges. I often wonder how hard he could have practised. People might think he was just singing freely and it came naturally to him; no, he would have practised so much to get every note in that sruthi. That’s why people loved his music. Once I heard his Pantuvarali and I was astounded. In Tamil, we term such a voice “venkala kural” (brass voice).

Coming back to composing, how does the tune occur to you? As a melody or raga?

While composing Pallavis, the raga phrase comes first and then I fit it to a lyric, then tala etc; but for an existing lyric I have to compose the tune. The latter is difficult because you have to fix a raga according to the sound and meaning of the lyrics. Sometimes, everything may sound correct, and sometimes everything may sound wrong too. There are occasions when I have changed the ragas after composing because I didn’t feel fully happy.

Is the approach the same with texts such as that of Perumal Murugan and Narayana Guru too? I ask this because they sound so apt for the text.

Yes, very much.

In Perumal Murugan’s “Nee Mattume” that TM Krishna often sings, raga Kapi sounds inseparable.

I went through the text, opened the voice recorder and just sang. That’s what you hear. I did very few corrections later. It just happened!

Probably because of your training, when you sing it would stay in the raga framework.

Probably yes. If you are composing for movies, you have all the liberties; but for Carnatic musicians generally you have to be in within a framework. My dream project “Solladi Shivashakti” comprising six Bharathiyaar songs which I tuned, orchestrated, and conducted was sung by Smt Bombay Jayashree and released by Rajalakshmi Fine Arts Sri Sathish Kumar. In that, I sang the tune and sent to Jayashree and she sang exactly what I had sung. That was the respect she had for the composer and the tune. I did the orchestration with 35 live musicians. People who heard it liked it very much.

Do you notate when you compose?

No, I just record and share it with the musicians because I want them to sing/play the sound of the notes and not just the notes. Even for the background scores in songs I do the same (Sings a few phrases to demonstrate how the sound is important).

I often ask Carnatic musicians if they wouldn’t want to sing songs with emotions other than the usual bhakthi. How open are you to composing songs with the flavour of say romance or even a little eroticism?

I have composed a lot of Pallavis with romance as the theme. Once Krishna wanted me to compose a romantic Pallavi in raga Husseini for his concert at the Music Academy. I got the tune easily, but was unable to fix the text easily. Whatever text I came up with didn’t match the tune. Then suddenly this line popped up: “Thedinen kidaykkavillai varthaigal” (I have looked for words everywhere, but couldn’t find them)and used it as the poorvaangam (first part) and the utharaangam (second part) completed the expression of romance: Aval aazhaginai varnikka (to describe her beauty). It meant her beauty was beyond any expression I could think of. Krishna was very happy.and Sangita Sivakumar, his wife and Carnatic Singer, told me: “Arun this pallavi is highly romantic”.

So you don’t have a problem using such “Un-carnatic” emotions.

Not at all. Another time I wrote a pallavi which went like this: “Nambikkai inriye Vazhvillai” manidha unarndhiduvaai [thannambikkai inriye] on hope and self-confidence. Usually the second half adds more meaning.

How can you make layam more appealing to the lay-audience?

You should see that it sounds nice to the ears. I don’t think one shouldn’t play complicated stuff, but it should be enjoyable by common people. At the same time, the latter should also try to learn more about them and listen with an enhanced sense of laya-aesthetic.

Do you need to be a mathematician to be a good mridangist?

Not really.

How do you respond to the usual allegation that Carnatic music is exclusive and its ecosystem is endogamous? Can an example of social music such as El Systema of Venezuela that has produced world-class classical musicians happen in Carnatic?

I don’t think anybody is stopping anybody from learning Carnatic music. I wouldn’t certainly support it. But to make people from all walks of life learn and enjoy Carnatic music, musicians have to go out and teach, I mean to teach people who are not exposed to this kind of music. I think that will help.

Making Carnatic music a subject in school curriculum will definitely work. Familiarity at least at the varisai level can make people more equipped. It can also give some kind of relaxation to kids.

Do you have any favourite musician that you feel happy to accompany?

I play with a lot of musicians. I like everyone’s music whom I accompany. Listening and performing with good musicians gives me satisfaction which I can’t even express in words.

Percussionists?

I like all the top mridangam legends of today and you know those names. I firmly believe that everyone has worked hard to attain what they have achieved.

And finally, who are your favourite composers?

Definitely the Trinity. I always love to play Trinity compositions. Take a composition such as “Oh Rangasayee…” People ask whether Saint Thyagaraja himself composed all those sangathis in the first line, but I would say you cannot beat the initial line. The basic melodic phrase in the first line itself is sheer genius. I do pooja for Trinity compositions. I have always been a lover of the creator first although the executor plays an important role in taking the creation to the audience.



Sarpa Salpa deliver a catchy new tune, “She Never Lies” – Aipate


Northampton-based UK indie band Sarpa Salpa have a massive new single called “She Never Lies”.

The super-catchy tune will surely get you on your feet; it’s pure bliss. I love how the chorus bursts with energy, synths and melodies.

Sarap Salpa comments: “‘She Never Lies’ was one of the first songs we wrote together as a band! We wrote it a long time ago back when we still rehearsed at Marcus (vocals) parents house! It’s become somewhat of a live fan favourite and it felt like the perfect time to revisit it in a studio setting. We’re so proud of how it turned and think it’s some of our best work to date!”.

I’ve selfishly been playing this song on repeat, so much so that this review is arriving late. Sorry, my bad!

By the way, you can get to connect with Sarpa Salpa on Instagram.



Have These Cacti Made the Album of the Year?


Have you ever wondered what thorny Cacti sound like? Or if they can even create a tone audible to human ears? Well, now you can listen to real-life Cacti in action courtesy of audiovisual artist Love Hultén.

The multi-faceted creative utilizes tech-forward wires to extract data from the desert plants through a custom-built sound machine that he handmade. How does he do it, you ask? First, Hultén clips the appliance onto the Cactus thorns and listens closely for their natural sound frequency to kick in.

The result is an eerie tune that gives off a haunting attitude, and the artist chose to create distinct songs from every sound. Titled “Desert Songs,” Hultén analyses the Cacti’s natural vibrations and records the electrical current transmitted from the plants. So while the Cacti work together to create synchronized melodies, they might have just made the album of the year.

Listen to “Desert Songs” above.

Elsewhere, the YCMC-exclusive New Balance 990v3 takes a hike.

WRR, Dallas’ classical music station, sees big spike in listeners over holidays


WRR-FM (101.1), Dallas’ classical music station, saw a significant spike in listeners over the holidays. From Dec. 8 to Jan. 4, weekly listeners were up by around 44,000 compared with the same time last year, according to data from Nielsen Audio, a consumer research company. Weekly listenership was also the highest it’s been since before the pandemic.

The radio station began playing round-the-clock holiday music the day after Thanksgiving for the first time this year. The move was part of a stationwide shift to all-classical programming and was a precursor to KERA taking over management of the city-owned station Jan. 3.

Under KERA management, WRR is still a classical station, but it has switched from a commercial to a noncommercial format. Commercial ads for CBD oils and carpet cleaning have been replaced by sponsor messages like those heard on KERA. And paid programs on Saturday and Sunday mornings, like church services and a retirement planning show, have been dropped. There are now more classical programs on the weekend.

KERA to take over management of WRR, Dallas’ classical music station

Amy Bishop, WRR’s marketing manager and midday host, attributes the recent bump to the all-holiday-music format as well as heavy promotion on KERA’s TV and radio stations.

“We now have the resources to really market ourselves in a very meaningful way,” she said. “We can cast a wider net to reach more people who may not even know about us — or maybe they just need to be reminded that North Texas has a radio station committed to classical music and the arts.

“I feel like this is giving us a chance to live up to our potential in a way like we never have before.”

Classical music in quarantine: WRR builds connections over the airwaves

‘It’s Happening Right Here’: RaeLynn’s Song Debuts With Important Message


RaeLynn delivered a powerful song with an important message on Friday (January 27).

The country singer-songwriter knew without a doubt that she had to sing “It’s Happening Right Here,” going hand-in-hand with a documentary that aims to raise awareness about sexual solicitation and how to recognize risks to help protect children and teens.

RaeLynn announced earlier this week that she’d release “It’s Happening Right Here,” after teasing her social media followers with a few hints. RaeLynn confirmed the song and music video’s release date with Operation Underground Railroad, a nonprofit organization that aims to “rescue children from human trafficking and sexual exploitation.” Its founder, Tim Ballard, a former special agent speaks at the beginning of the music video, which opens with a statistic: 1 in 5 children who use the internet have been sexually solicited.

“Through Raelynn’s new original song featured in the groundbreaking documentary ‘It’s Happening Right Here,’ we are shown that light can be found even in the darkest places. “It’s Happening Right Here” unveils the truth that sex trafficking can happen in every community in the U.S. Despite the darkness of the crime, hope can be found through the organizations fighting to end trafficking, as well as those sharing their experiences to protect others.”

“When I got the call from [Tim Ballard] asking me to sing this song for this Documentary my answer was a 100% Yes,” RaeLynn shared on Friday. “My prayer for this Song/ Music Video and film, ‘It’s Happening Right Here,’ is that it will bring awareness and shed light on the seriousness of this topic. I pray it educates people on how to protect their children and families and through that save lives. Despite the evilness of the sex trafficking industry, there is hope – there are still good people who care and are willing to speak up and protect our kids. We can let the light in and I pray this song is a catalyst to that. Also the biggest shoutout to my creative brother [TK McKamy] we have been doing videos together for almost 10 years. He directed ‘god made girls’ and I love him so dearly. Thank you for making this come to life with this amazing team.”

“It’s happening right here/ It’s happening right now/ Yeah Once you turn the light on/ You can’t just turn it out/ It’s behind the door, just up the street/ Down the hall on a cell phone screen/ It’s a wake up call for us all in the mirror/ It’s happening right here”

Ballard explains, as the music video begins: “They’re looking for prey. They’re looking for their next victim. People kind of comfort themselves by saying, ‘well, that’s not me. That’s just in very, very remote, poor areas.’ It’s in every area. The only difference is, in the more affluent areas, it’s undercover.”

The documentary will be available to rent or buy on January 31. Watch RaeLynn’s music video here:



Friday New Releases – January 27, 2023 – 2 Loud 2 Old Music


Friday New Releases – January 27, 2023


Categories Christian Music, Country, New Releases, Pop Music, RockTags #FridayNewMusic, …And Oceans, Alex Melton, Arctic Rain, Ava Max, Bass Drum of Death, Bizarrekult, Bob Dylan, Carly Simon, Crowne, Da’ Truth, Dokken, Electric Mob, Elle King, Emarosa, Girish And the Chronicles, Grief Symposium, Hammock, Housefires, Illiterate Light, Jonah Yano, Kaery Ann, Khai Dreams, Kimbra, Liv Sin, Mono Inc., New Order, Noah Floersch, Numun, Ominous Scriptures, Oozing Wound, Sam Smith, Samia, Sightless Pit, Steve Vai, The Arcs, The Inspector Cluzo, The Mother Hips, The Tubs, Tyler Hubbard, Uriah Heep, Violet Saturn, White Reaper



Google created an AI that can generate music from text descriptions, but won’t release it


An impressive new AI system from Google can generate music in any genre given a text description. But the company, fearing the risks, has no immediate plans to release it.

Called MusicLM, Google’s certainly isn’t the first generative AI system for song. There have been other attempts, including Riffusion, an AI that composes music by visualizing it, as well as Dance Diffusion, Google’s own AudioML and OpenAI’s Jukebox. But owing to technical limitations and limited training data, none have been able to produce songs particularly complex in composition or high-fidelity.

MusicLM is perhaps the first that can.

Detailed in an academic paper, MusicLM was trained on a dataset of 280,000 hours of music to learn to generate coherent songs for descriptions of — as the creators put it — “significant complexity” (e.g. “enchanting jazz song with a memorable saxophone solo and a solo singer” or “Berlin ’90s techno with a low bass and strong kick.” Its songs, remarkably, sound something like a human artist might compose, albeit not necessarily as inventive or musically cohesive.

It’s hard to overstate just how good the samples sound, given that there aren’t musicians or instrumentalists in the loop. Even when fed somewhat long and meandering descriptions, MusicLM manages to capture nuances like instrumental riffs, melodies and moods.

The caption for the sample below, for example, included the bit “induces the experience of being lost in space,” and it certainly delivers on that front (at least to my ears):

https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/audio-1.wav?_=1

Here’s another sample, generated from a description starting with the sentence “The main soundtrack of an arcade game.” Plausible, right?

https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/audio.wav?_=2

MusicLM’s capabilities extend beyond generating short clips of songs. The Google researchers show that the system can build on existing melodies, whether hummed, sung, whistled or played on an instrument. Moreover, MusicLM can take several descriptions written in sequence (e.g. “time to meditate,” “time to wake up,” “time to run,” “time to give 100%”) and create a sort of melodic “story” or narrative ranging up to several minutes in length — perfectly fit for a movie soundtrack.

See below, which came from the sequence “electronic song played in a videogame,” “meditation song played next to a river,” “fire,” “fireworks.”

https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/example_2.wav?_=3

That’s not all. MusicLM can also be instructed via a combination of picture and caption, or generate audio that’s “played” by a specific type of instrument in a certain genre. Even the experience level of the AI “musician” can be set, and the system can create music inspired by places, epochs or requirements (e.g. motivational music for workouts).

But MusicLM certainly isn’t flawless — far from it, in truth. Some of the samples have a distorted quality to them, an unavoidable side effect of the training process. And while MusicLM can technically generate vocals, including choral harmonies, they leave a lot to be desired. Most of the “lyrics” range from barely English to pure gibberish, sung by synthesized voices that sound like amalgamations of several artists.

Still, the Google researchers note the many ethical challenges posed by a system like MusicLM, including a tendency to incorporate copyrighted material from training data into the generated songs. During an experiment, they found that about 1% of the music the system generated was directly replicated from the songs on which it trained — a threshold apparently high enough to discourage them from releasing MusicLM in its current state.

“We acknowledge the risk of potential misappropriation of creative content associated to the use case,” the co-authors of the paper wrote. “We strongly emphasize the need for more future work in tackling these risks associated to music generation.”

Assuming MusicLM or a system like it is one day made available, it seems inevitable that major legal issues will come to the fore — even if the systems are positioned as tools to assist artists rather than replace them. They already have, albeit around simpler AI systems. In 2020, Jay-Z’s record label filed copyright strikes against a YouTube channel, Vocal Synthesis, for using AI to create Jay-Z covers of songs like Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire.” After initially removing the videos, YouTube reinstated them, finding the takedown requests were “incomplete.” But deepfaked music still stands on murky legal ground.

A whitepaper authored by Eric Sunray, now a legal intern at the Music Publishers Association, argues that AI music generators like MusicLM violate music copyright by creating “tapestries of coherent audio from the works they ingest in training, thereby infringing the United States Copyright Act’s reproduction right.” Following the release of Jukebox, critics have also questioned whether training AI models on copyrighted musical material constitutes fair use. Similar concerns have been raised around the training data used in image-, code- and text-generating AI systems, which is often scraped from the web without creators’ knowledge.

From a user perspective, Waxy’s Andy Baio speculates that music generated by an AI system would be considered a derivative work, in which case only the original elements would be protected by copyright. Of course, it’s unclear what might be considered “original” in such music; using this music commercially is to enter uncharted waters. It’s a simpler matter if generated music is used for purposes protected under fair use, like parody and commentary, but Baio expects that courts would have to make case-by-base judgments.

It might not be long before there’s some clarity on the matter. Several lawsuits making their way through the courts will likely have a bearing on music-generating AI, including one pertaining to the rights of artists whose work is used to train AI systems without their knowledge or consent. But time will tell.

Lindsey Sampson – Sand: An Elemental Folk-Pop Triumph. – Independent Music – New Music


With frenetic synth sequencing that made us nostalgic for the soundscapes from Alan Vega, the pop singer-songwriter, Lindsey Sampson’s latest single, Sand, is an elemental triumph.

Oceanic momentum flows through progressive rising tides in the un-archetypally structured single that harnesses deep reverence for natural phenomena and articulately observes how nature often works to reflect introspective sensations.

Lindsey Sampson, who spends her time between Nashville and New England, marries the soul of country with a contemporary indie folk pop edge that is definitively hers. We can fully attest to her ability to appeal to the spirituality that lies within us all – regardless of whether we nurture that relationship or not.

Since her humble beginnings, the singer-songwriter has been nominated for the award of Best Female Performer at the New England Music Awards and received many other accolades along the way while performing solo and as part of her folk-rock band, Visiting Wine. 

Sand will officially release on January 27th. Dig your toes in on SoundCloud.

Review by Amelia Vandergast



Download Production Master samples on RouteNote Create – download professional DnB, House, Trap, Dubstep, and EDM samples right now


Prepare for heavy hitting bass, seriously catchy loops, and supreme lead sounds – we’d like to welcome Production Master to RouteNote Create!

If you’re like me then you’re always on the hunt for huge sounds. Sounds that drop jaws, scrunch up bass faces, and make people swing their hips with their arms in the air. Well, I have some good news for you!

Production Master’s reputation almost always precedes them. Their catalog of samples features sounds from many renowned artists including Drumsound & Bassline Smith! In fact, Production Master is the producer collective behind Philosophy Recordings – an EDM record label with a reputation for great sounds.

The collection of producers in the Production Master fold brings dazzling presets and sample packs straight to your DAW. Their focus is on EDM music, including styles such as Trap, Deep House, Dubstep, and Drum & Bass. On top of those infamous styles, Production Master offers sounds suited to Big Room music, Melbourne Bounce… the list really does go on!

Ultimately, if you’re quest is one to find professional EDM samples that are ready to use straight out of the box then Production Master is about to rock your world. Let’s take a look at some of their sample packs!


Tantrum Desire

If you’re a fan of Drum & Bass then chances are you’ve heard of Tantrum Desire, and you may have seen them perform. Well, they’re undoubtedly one of the biggest names in DnB, and with a plethora of tracks on channels such as UKF and remixes for Laidback Luke, Rusko, Skrillex, Utah Saints, and more, who wouldn’t want to get their hands on their samples?

Now, the ‘Tantrum Desire – Technique Essential’ sample pack allows you to download their signature sound at the click of a finger. In this mind-boggling, groundbreaking monster of a DnB sample pack, Tantrum Desire has created an enormous collection of explosive basses, epic leads, energizing synths, extra-tight drums, and unbelievably versatile drum loops. As a result, you can instantly spice up your DnB productions.


Tech House Hype

You can almost feel your studio turning into a club just by how lively the cuts are in this pack! Expect to find funky melodies and dark ambient loops, rich piano stabs, minimal techno top loops, chord synth stabs doused in reverb, moving soulful chords, rhythmic percussion, thumpin’ kickdrums, hard-hitting claps and snares, subtle moving basslines, vocal ambient cuts, FX and much more!


Afterlife – Modern Deep House & House

It’s time to get ready for your next deep house hit with ‘Afterlife – Modern Deep House & House’. The sounds that await you in this pack will give you a great opportunity to create a radio-ready track in no time! You can get creative with the astonishing loops & perfectly tailored sounds in this pack and create irresistible movement on the dancefloor!


Iconic Chart Topping Trap

This pack gives you the tools to create unavoidable, chart-topping beats. Iconic Chart Topping Trap is loaded with vigorous drums, aggressive drum loops, blazing 808s, ecstatic FX loops, and a ton of inspiring melody loops. Furthermore, the loops contain lit keys, wavy pads, saucy plucks, and a whole lot more!


Ski Mask G-House & Bass House

Ski Mask – G-House & Bass House is an exciting pack offering the latest house movement infused with old 90s school riffs. This pack gives you a plethora of sounds suitable for G-House, Bass House, Jungle Terror, Hybrid Trap, Dubstep, and other bass music subgenres.


Psystyle – Psytrance Vs Rawstyle

Psystyle – Psytrance Vs. Rawstyle offers a divine mix of psychedelic psytrance sounds and aggressive, raw style samples to create a one-of-a-kind rave gem. Inside you will find the most intrusive raw style kicks, bold psy kicks, destructive screeches, vigorous vocal loops, crystal clear drum fills, energizing synth loops, otherworldly atmospheres, raw glitches, FX elements, and so much more!


Retro Wave – Synthwave And 80’s Retro

‘Retro Wave: Synthwave & 80’s Retro’ is an XL pack that will take you back in time! This pack will surely satisfy your senses if Synth Wave is the musical style that you are gunning for. On ‘Retro Wave: Synthwave & 80’s Retro’, Production Master focused on an authentic experience of the classic Synth Wave characteristics.

Created with infamous analog synthesizers such as the Yamaha DX7, Roland Jupiter-8, and Virus TI, Production Master used genuine 80’s sound production & processing techniques to bring this pack to life. This pack is chockfull of vintage analog sounds, loops, and one-shots just as they would sound in 1980-1989.


Evil Nightmares

With distressing sounds and intimidating loops, Evil Nightmares is the most unsettling cinematic soundbank you’ll find. Filled with deeply disturbing braams, horrifying drones, cinematic drum loops, and creaking strings, you’ll experience sonic horror like you never have before. Add chilling vibes to your productions or create the creepiest soundscapes for trailers, games, radio, or television with this frightening cinematic soundbank.


Alchemy – G-House & Bass House

The Alchemy (G-House & Bass House) sample pack delivers you the ultimate collection of Bass House sounds. You’ll find it’s packed with steady basses, premium drums, and supreme vocals, and it really is a perfect fit for every Deep / Bass or G-House producer! 

Filter through its many premium loops & one-shots including EDM keys, spaciously fluorescent pads, an artillery of ambiance and effects, and, of course, some heavy-hitting bass sounds.


Nemesis – War Of The Gods

Now, Production Master state that ‘Nemesis – War Of The Gods’ is their “most ambitious pack to date”. While that may be true, this cinematic sample pack offers a world of orchestral possibilities world with over 2 years of work in one neat package. Several cinematic composers right out of Hollywood took part in the making of this project, and various singers with an opera background feature in the recordings.

‘Nemesis – War Of The Gods’ will take you on a journey of blockbuster proportions. Find vocals, a catalog of live instruments, sound effects, soundscapes, and orchestral percussions right here! Unfortunately, the RouteNote Create edition does not include the Kontakt instruments.


Check out Production Master’s catalog of sounds and much more on RouteNote Create! Download 100 royalty-free one-shots, loops, FX & full sample packs right now for $2.99!