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Tamil Blues
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| Text by Sona Bahadur | |||||||||
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Published: Volume 16, Issue 3, March, 2008
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She’s been around the world in four albums. Transporting South Indian ragas from their classical setting by reworking them with blues, rock, reggae and pop, Susheela Raman is among the most audacious musicians around. Sona Bahadur catches up with the gypsy woman at Mumbai’s picturesque Khotachi Wadi
We’re sitting in close friend, designer James Ferrera’s Goan-style home in Mumbai’s quaint heritage pocket of Khotachi Wadi. The London-based singer is visiting India with her partner, guitarist Sam Mills. It’s her annual three-monthly trip to the homeland to spend time with her parents in Chennai and escape the English winter. She’s been there, done that. Gigs in Tamil Nadu — including a concert with Kamal Haasan’s daughter Shruti Haasan — followed by performances at the Jaipur Literary Festival, Live-Alive in Delhi and The Blue Frog in Mumbai. Susheela’s music is at once mystical and sexy, working powerfully at an emotional level. A hedonist for new sounds, she’s constantly pushing the frontiers of fusion. When you hear Carnatic with a bluesy treatment or a Lou Reed classic sounding like it originated from Chennai or the Mississippi Delta, you’re in Susheela Country. Rendering a Tamil Tevaram and a Captain Beefheart song with equal élan, the maverick sings in Tamil, English and occasionally French. She’s also a consummate song writer. Though she finds the Indian fusion music scenario interesting and abundant in talent, Susheela feels musicians here could do with an external point of view. “I don’t think it’s of international standard yet. There are a lot of really great people about. But we need better production and more insight into the origins of European music. Recently, I met this rock band from Bangalore. After talking to them, I found their references quite superficial. The philosophy of rock goes much deeper than popular music.
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