Poging GOUD - Vrij

Folk jams with electronic

Mint Bangalore

|

March 08, 2025

A lilting flute melody floats uneasily over see-sawing synths and a bass attack so heavy that it rattles the delicate, coloured-glass windows.

- BHANUJ KAPPAL

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.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

India's fertilizer policy needs a fruitful rehaul

Our subsidy framework is a formula for fiscal waste, inefficiency, ecological damage and health hazards. Let's adopt direct cash transfers to farmers and market determined usage

time to read

2 mins

January 07, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

Why Grok is under the lens, but not Gemini or ChatGPT

MeitY’s notice put X under scrutiny; experts point to user policy gap with other platforms

time to read

3 mins

January 07, 2026

Mint Bangalore

NHAI asks DoT to fix mobile network gaps on highways

As India builds highways at a record pace, a critical digital gap is becoming harder to ignore.

time to read

1 min

January 07, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Devyani-Sapphire merger is a good fit, but not a demand fix

The proposed merger of Devyani International Ltd and Sapphire Foods Ltd appears strategically sound.

time to read

1 mins

January 07, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

Edtech makes micro-learning pivot as dealmaking declines

The bet is on short, vernacular micro-learning to capture low-intent, high-frequency users

time to read

2 mins

January 07, 2026

Mint Bangalore

A study in deductions: How the taxman spots anomalies

A guide to how the tax system’s algorithms are flagging mismatches in Form 16, AIS and ITRs

time to read

4 mins

January 07, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Gold price spike lifts Titan Q3 sales

Titan Company on Tuesday posted a 40% jump in overall sales for the December quarter, driven by a higher average selling price for its gold jewellery and festive demand.

time to read

1 min

January 07, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

After big bets, Japanese firms boost India tech centre plans

After Japanese investments into India hit a high last year, some of the largest companies of the East Asian country are now looking to expand or establish tech centres to tap India's deep talent pool.

time to read

2 mins

January 07, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

TVs ward off smartphone threat with AI

Uber robotaxis are on their way in, in 2026—and other AI news this week

time to read

1 min

January 07, 2026

Mint Bangalore

Mint Bangalore

Mid-sized startups ditch unicorn chase to go public earlier

A growing cohort of mid-sized companies is considering a much earlier entry into public markets, unlike the post-pandemic boom of 2021 when Indian startups stayed private as long as possible in pursuit of unicorn valuations.

time to read

1 min

January 07, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size