my people are…

 
my people are album art
 

It’s here. It’s finally here. Here’s my latest album, my people are… on all streaming platforms. I don’t know about you, but I’m a mix of excited and relieved. Please listen, and like-share-subscribe-buy.

Spotify

YouTube

Apple Music

Bandcamp

Here’s a long description of my work on this album.

In 2019, I started getting increasingly influenced by Indian art and music, especially Hindustani classical music. Multiple visits to India at the start of 2020 only served to cement this influence on my life and my musical palette. When I returned from India on the last of these trips, I emerged into a world about to be locked down. Borders were being shut, and people were looking at each other with fear; my anxiety about my future suddenly became a global anxiety about the future, we all started staying indoors and avoiding the big bad wolves outside on the streets.

As a result, I no longer saw anxiety as just the little devil on my shoulder. While my own work started to get unbearable, and while I found myself plunged into a total isolation that continues to this day, India entered one of the world's strictest lockdowns, and the most vulnerable suffered the most for it. The themes that had started to play on my mind towards the end of 2019 blew up: the personal and the societal, and where the two intersect, anxiety, both clinical and situational, and the meaning of home and identity.

In a contracting world, the repetitive, post-punk influenced, instrumental electronic music I had been creating for the two years prior just did not work: it did not, as I think good art should, even attempt to comfort the afflicted or afflict the comfortable. But another musical voice started to take shape, and with it, the musical choices I would make on this album. First, the already mentioned influence of Indian music. And second, the use of the human voice as an instrument, as opposed to a vehicle for words; I saw the use of the human voice to convey emotions, but say little by way of words as an artistic choice to emote freely rather than to be restricted to saying something banal.

In this album, I’ve taken all my anxieties and fears, and hip-hops and classicals, and happies and sads, and made a little less than forty minutes worth of music that feels like home, while also realising that home is a place in time that can no longer be. In many ways, I think I never really said goodbye to the city I love. And even when I return to Mumbai, be it for a while, or for good, I won't return to the Mumbai I left. Like the old question about the ship of Theseus, how many friends have to leave for home to change irrevocably? How much do your people need to transmogrify for home to no longer be recognisably the same? 

Previous
Previous

Fly Me There

Next
Next

bad wolf