يحاول ذهب - حر
Folk jams with electronic
March 08, 2025
|Mint Hyderabad
A lilting flute melody floats uneasily over see-sawing synths and a bass attack so heavy that it rattles the delicate, coloured-glass windows.
Percussive dhol rhythms find themselves wrapped in velvety reverb, as if trapped by the handpainted clouds covering the walls and ceilings. Inspired by the monsoon, Badal Mahal is a fine-dining restaurant that sits atop a 17th-century Rajasthani fort, where patrons can cosplay as old-school Indian nobility. But for a few days last December, its cloud-motif ambience incubated a very different kind of sonic thunderstorm, as UK producer Vivek Sharda and a group of Rajasthani musicians perfected their apocalyptic, awe-inspiring fusion of desert folk and post-industrial electronics.
Sharda—who performs as V.I.V.E.K—came up in the 2000s London dub-step scene, and specialises in brooding dub and bass music. The musicians sitting across from him—including Bhanwari Devi, Krishna Kumar, Kambhra Khan, Kutle Khan, Alser Khan, Mahmud Khan and Yusuf Khan—are hand-picked torchbearers of centuries-old Rajasthani folk traditions. Their unlikely collaboration has been orchestrated by the curators of Magnetic Fields—the boutique electronica music festival that takes place at Alsisar Mahal—for Fieldlines, their "inter-traditional and inter-generational" music residency programme.
Fieldlines has been one of the festival's major highlights since it started in 2019, consistently delivering one of the weekend's most fascinating and innovative sets. In 2022, for example, the residency featured a collaboration between Chennai electronic music producer Vinayak and the Forgotten Songs Collective, which consists of eight members of the Biate tribe from Assam's Dima Hasao, supposedly the last remaining musicians in their community. It was, I'm told, the first time that this music had been performed outside the Biate homeland. That's exactly the sort of amazing, once-in-a-lifetime experience that music festivals are uniquely positioned to facilitate.
Sadly, it's an opportunity that few Indian festivals take advantage of.
هذه القصة من طبعة March 08, 2025 من Mint Hyderabad.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Mint Hyderabad
Mint Hyderabad
Trump warns of 25% tariff on countries trading with Iran
While India-Iran trade remains modest, the ties are key to New Delhi's strategic autonomy
2 mins
January 14, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
He's their daddy. Meme-stock traders rush to Powell's defense.
When Jerome Powell went public with his defense of the Federal Reserve's independence, the central bank’s chair found an unlikely army standing behind him: the meme-stock crowd.
3 mins
January 14, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
Discounts vary as BigBasket reshapes dark store strategy
As competition intensifies in instant grocery delivery, Tata group-owned BigBasket is reworking its dark store network and offering discounts based on how individual stores perform on order volumes.
2 mins
January 14, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
Planning to sell your gold ETF? Here’s the tax impact for NRIs
I have lived in Hong Kong for 10 years and invest regularly in Indian markets.
1 mins
January 14, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
Shapewear becomes wardrobe essential, draws startups, titans
Shapewear is quietly reshaping India's apparel landscape as demand shifts towards functional, everyday innerwear that affirms both confidence and body positivity.
2 mins
January 14, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
HCLTech reports $146 mn in advanced AI revenue, up 46%
HCL Technologies
2 mins
January 14, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
RBI's FX swap sees nearly 3x demand
The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI's) three-year dollar/rupee buy-sell swap auction drawing bids a little under three times the $10 billion size.
1 min
January 14, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
It's time for India to reconsider its rejection of dual citizenship
Allowing it could deepen engagement with Indian expats and help the economy in a volatile world
3 mins
January 14, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
Iran is hunting down Starlink users to stop protest videos from going global
Iran shut down most internet connections for the country’s 90 million inhabitants late last week
3 mins
January 14, 2026
Mint Hyderabad
Battery storage set to get local flavour
Components in BESS may need compulsory 50% local content
1 min
January 14, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
