Tag Archives: Bhoomi

Peepal Tree all set for their debut gig at BFlat

Share

Bangalore-based band Peepal Tree  is all set for their debut gig at The BFlat Bar today. The band comprises Sujay Harthi on vocals, Tony Das on guitars, Praveen Biligiri on bass and Willy Demoz on drums and percussions. They describe their music as “Indian melodies sitting on funk grooves with overtones of electronica, and sung in Indian languages.”

Each musician in the band has been part of some of the most successful bands from India. Guitarist Tony Das is also a part of the heavy metal band Bhoomi and used to play with independent music stalwarts Thermal and a Quarter, and hard rockers Moksha. He has toured extensively with these bands and does sessions work as a guitarist, bassist, programmer, and writer/composer, both in the studio and live. He has also worked on the background score of some of the biggest Bollywood movies over the last few years such as Paan Singh Tomar, Rowdy Rathore, Son of Sardaar, Saheb Biwi Aur Gangster Returns, R.Rajkumar, with legendary music director Sandeep Chowta. Drummer Willy Demoz has performed globally with the Raghu Dixit Project for the last 5 years. He has also performed with other celebrated and well known artists and bands like Vasundara Das, Sunita Sarathy, Sunita Rao, Keith Peters, Moksha, Bhoomi to name a few. Bassist Praveen Biligiri has performed across the country with numerous bands in Bangalore, most notably Bhoomi. Vocalist Sujay Harthi has performed with various Bangalore bands, the most popular ones being Bhoomi and Second Hand. Bhoomi is currently recording an album with Grammy winning producer Neil Kernon.

Speaking about the band and their debut gig, vocalist Sujay Harthi says, “The four of us have been playing together for the last 12 years and we never had a band that we started together, finally we have a project that we can call our own. Playing regional stuff is definitely a first for all of us and is an entirely new experience for us – singing in a language we have never before. We are hoping that the audience will be pleasantly surprised, and going by the general response to the songs we have released online, I’m sure they will take to the sound!”

Catch Peepal Tree live at their first gig at BFlat, Bangalore tonight!

 

[facebookall_comments]

Kryptos’ 15th Anniversary Celebrations at Max Mueller Bhavan, Bangalore

Share

Goethe Institut, Bangalore witnessed India’s heavy metal band, Kryptos’ extended 15th anniversary celebrations on the 25th of January. The Saturday was a tribute to old school heavy metal with Bangalore-based thrash metal band Theorized opening for Kryptos, and vocalists from Bhoomi, Dying Embrace and Witchgoat making appearances as special guests, to the delight of fans.

Kryptos’ 15th Anniversary Celebrations at Max Mueller Bhavan, Bangalore

The evening began with Theorized ripping the stage apart with Ankit Suryakanth’s shredding lead solos. Yash Kumar’s drumming served as the backbone of Theorized’s music. They had a fully fledged set list, with fast paced riffs, and tempo and count changes that could not allow the crowd to stand still. Soon enough, they began to grow brutal, in response to the Yash’s high speed double kick drumming. Ankit’s extraordinarily extended guitar solos was worth paying homage to. Though initial sound issues were an encumbrance for the band, what it lacked was powerful vocals contributing to the dark atmosphere.

Kryptos’ 15th Anniversary Celebrations at Max Mueller Bhavan, Bangalore

Less than ten people were moshing at first but later, an aggressive and brutal crowd filled the area, leaving gaps for none. Heavy metal clogged the air with Nolan’s raspy vocals, Ganesh’s bass, Rohit’s extended solos and Anthony’s powerful triplets and hammer blasts. Their songs ‘Nexus Legion’ and ‘The Mask of Anubis’ with its progressive riffs conjured a moshpit too ferocious for the place to handle. Rohit’s dexterity made people headbang at his feet, while Ganesh besieged his fans with his skill at the other end.

Kryptos’ 15th Anniversary Celebrations at Max Mueller Bhavan, Bangalore

Nolan kept the crowd mesmerized with the band’s Wacken tales, and soon enough, Kryptos was joined by vocalist Sujay Harthi from Bhoomi. The events that followed next were of pure metal consequence as the gig time travelled to the days of Iron Maiden, Black Sabbath, Judas Priest and Metallica. ‘The Trooper’ shook the place with Sujay ‘s vocals almost in lieu with Bruce Dickinson.

Kryptos’ 15th Anniversary Celebrations at Max Mueller Bhavan, Bangalore

As it ended, Dying Embrace’s Vikram Bhatt took possession of the stage. Bhatt covered Black Sabbath and Judas Priest, while enticing the crowd to sing along and headbang throughout.  Bharad Ravi from Witchgoat gave a neckwrenching performance of ‘Creeping Death’ and ‘Seek & Destroy’. Anthony Hoover’s drumming was adrenaline- inducing and the covers were perfect.  Kryptos performed a final song, accompanied by Rohit’s complex solo. The clock struck 10 before the crowd knew it, and it was long before the blend of melodic metal and thrash metal music could leave them undeterred.

Kryptos’ 15th Anniversary Celebrations at Max Mueller Bhavan, Bangalore

Kryptos and Theorized  kept the evening going and Nolan’s conversations kept the audience engaged. The continuous technical issues which Rohit faced were the only things that did not go as planned. All in all, Kryptos made sure that its 15th anniversary was celebrated with a huge metal bang!

[facebookall_comments]

Cactus, Bhoomi and Prachir at Deshapriya Park, Kolkata

Share
[facebookall_comments]

Evilution at Ion Bar, Bangalore

Share
Avatar photo

Uday Shanker

Uday Shanker is a freelance photographer based in Bangalore and has a day job.

[facebookall_comments]

Interview with Bhoomi

Share

Bhoomi was formed in April 2002 with the intention of playing original music in the cover-infested scene in India. Recognized as one of the best bands from Bangalore, the band is presently in the process of recording their first album. WTS caught up with band members Sujay, Praveen, Tony and Kishan and got them talking about their new album, their experiences on stage and more…

WTS: For how long have you been playing together and how has the journey been so far?

Tony: Seven years. Sujay and our bass player Praveen are only the original members of Bhoomi, as they started. I’m new, Kishan’s new. 7 years you can call it, 8 years of the band’s journey. These guys started in 2002 and I joined early 2004. So it was one year, plus a few months.

Sujay: It’s been great actually. We were a college band before Tony joined. We graduated and met Tony through another friend who was drumming for us – Willy (Wilfred Demoz, who plays with Raghu Dixit). So after that it has been total fun, it’s just that we used to concentrate on playing only metal, and after Tony came in , Mrinal came in, Willy came in, the influences became more, we started discovering new bands and playing a lot more shows. From 2004 after Tony joined, till 2006, we played a lot of gigs, we played at almost every college festival in and around Bangalore. We played a few times in Mumbai, Pune and Chennai.

WTS: How has the music changed with the forming of new associations and breaking up of old ones?

Sujay: It has affected in a good way I would say. The kind of music that we’re playing now is definitely a lot cooler and lot more interesting than what it was when we were a college band. Back then, it was more or less safe heavy metal – 4/4 kind of heavy metal. We just wanted to go there and play as loud as we could, but now the subtleties have come in.

WTS: What are the main themes or topics for most of your songs?

Tony: Politically driven in a few songs.

Sujay: More social I’ll say, about what happens around us. We have a song about the mindless, senseless riots which take place at the drop of a hat in India, like everybody goes about stoning buses for no apparent reason. They’re not involved, they don’t really have to do anything like that. It’s about that and how it affects people like me. If I’m going to work and I’m stuck in a jam because of a stupid rally going, for reasons I don’t care about. It affects me because I don’t want to get stuck on a hot day in a traffic jam.

WTS: What are your rehearsals generally like?

Kishan: They are damn funny actually. Out of one hour of jam time we get about 15 minutes of quality music and 45 minutes of quality bonding, when we take each other’s cases and stuff like that. We make good music though, in the 15 minutes of jam time. It just happens, which is what matters.

WTS: Tell us about the time you discovered your taste for heavy metal, did you guys also start off listening to boy bands, pop, rock etc. and progress towards something you liked best or was it heavy metal all along?

Kishan: Yeah most of us matured out of it really early except for Sujay who still listens to it! (laughs)

Tony: As long as there are boys in it! This guy (Sujay) just looks at the TV and goes “Oh, I love you Ronan Keating!” I was lucky because I grew up in Dubai where you had awesome radio!

Kishan: A lot of Spandex metal and Spandex rock!

Tony: This guy (points to Kishan) wears Spandex! (pulls his pants to demonstrate)

WTS: Do you believe that being in a band is equivalent to being in a relationship or do you think it is okay for band members to hook up with other bands once in a while?

Tony: When you say hook up now… (laughs)

Sujay: I think we’re cool about guys playing in different bands as long as you turn up for the gig, not even for the jam! (laughs) You can be committed and do other things.

Tony: Nowadays I think people are a lot more open to it, everyone’s playing with everybody else. Especially, if you look at something like the jazz community – each one of those guys is playing with everyone else at some point. Personally, there is only so much you can do with one band. There’s only so many people you can play with. When you’re playing with different people, you get so many opportunities, to play different kinds of music, to play on stage a lot more, it gives you a lot more of that experience. It’s the best way to learn stuff.

Sujay: There are people who are insecure about their bands. We’ve seen that happen, but we’re cool with that. I don’t think any one of us will find a bad bunch like this out there!

Tony: Awww, so sweet! (laughs)

WTS: When Lamb of God came down to perform in Bangalore, there was this bottle-throwing incident! What do you have to say about that?

Tony: Oh no! It’s called an incident now! The truth is that it was one stupid kid who got too drunk, he hadn’t been laid in a while or ever obviously, he had to find an outlet! (laughs)

Sujay: To answer this question seriously, the sound also plays a part. When an Indian band is opening for an international band on the same stage, the sound is like less than 50%.

Kishan: The point is we ultimately won the crowd over. Except that this guy (Sujay) gave a huge Gandhiji speech.

Tony: It was really a non incident that unfortunately got blown out of proportion.

WTS: There was this hiatus post March Metal Mania 2007, why didn’t we hear from you for a while?

Tony: We were sorting out stuff for our recording.

Sujay: We were just getting ready to record, which we did. We did the recording in Chamundeshwari Studios in Cunningham Road. We’ve spent close to ***** right now…

Tony: Sssh! Don’t quote the figures!

Sujay: **** dollars we had to pay in ****…

Tony: Shhhh!

Sujay: Because **** generally charges ***dollars.

Tony: (frustrated) Thank you! (hysterical laughing in the background)

WTS: What is essentially the difference between Bhoomi and Second Hand in terms of members and the music?

Tony: Same members.

Praveen: Second hand is more commercial, Bhoomi is actual passion!

Sujay: Second hand is all covers and Bhoomi is all originals with a few covers which we like.

WTS: What do you think sets you apart from the other metal bands in the city?

Tony: We sing. I think all the metal bands are growling and here we sing. We’re a little more old school. Our sound is not the contemporary heavy metal. That’s not what we sound like.

WTS: What advice do you have for people who want to form their own bands?

Tony: Don’t. Please! Spare us the pain because if you form your own band, we’re gonna have to come and judge you at some college competition! (laughs) Please don’t form a band!

Avatar photo

Priyanka Shetty

Priyanka Shetty is the founder of What's The Scene? Follow Priyanka on Twitter @priyanka_shetty

[facebookall_comments]

Bengaluru Hubba ft. Bhoomi, Caesar’s Palace at UB City, Bangalore

Share
Avatar photo

Shayne Reynolds

Shayne Reynolds is a rhythm guitarist, song-writer, harmonicist and singer. He is adventurous,uncomplicated and slightly eccentric . His other interests include eating, reading, exploring and bike-riding

[facebookall_comments]

Bhoomi, Caesar’s Palace and TAAQ at the Bengaluru Habba 2012

Share

First things first – What a venue! The open air amphitheater with the UB City tower looming majestically in the background, and its big bright blue horse logo looking down upon us was quite an amazing sight! And what’s more – for a city perpetually stuck in traffic jams, its habba started dot on time.

The line-up on this particular evening comprised of metal aficionados Bhoomi, the multi-genre, Bangalore based Caesar’s Palace and Bangalore rockers Thermal and a Quarter who made a surprise entry later. All three of them, veterans of the Bangalore rock scene, took to the stage with the promise of a great Saturday evening and they sure lived up to it.

Bhoomi, Caesar's Palace and TAAQ at the Bengaluru Habba 2012

First up was Bhoomi, one of Bangalore’s oldest and best metal acts. They started the evening with their renditions of rock classics like AC/DC’s ‘Highway to Hell’ and Pink Floyd’s ‘Another Brick in the Wall’, and smoothly drifted into Deep Purple land with Jason Zachariah belting out the keyboard solo to Deep Purple’s ‘Highway Star’ and then Tony Das belting out the guitar solo from ‘Burn’, both playing them absolutely perfectly. Though I’m a fan of bands covering songs their own way rather than playing it exactly like it is, I have to admit that Bhoomi’s version of ‘Another Brick in the Wall’ did seem a tad out of place and unnecessarily heavy. Tony Das sang the next song ‘Burn it Down’, a very bluesy number with some great guitar licks. This was followed by another cover, Mr. Big’s ‘Daddy, Brother, Lover, Little Boy’.

They finally went into their originals, starting with ‘Inside Story’, a song about the press today and its obsession with the personal lives and affairs of celebrities. It had some great harmonies between Tony and Jason and ended with a really cool guitar-hero solo from the former. Next they played ‘Uncultured’, a song about riots with some really powerful vocals. It had a great vibe and had me replaying “Come help us fight…War without reason” in my head even after they finished. Their last song was ‘The Game’, a song about playing music live (I loved how Sujay bonded with the audience by explaining each song before playing it. Tony thought the better alternative was to chug some beer before each song. I loved that too!) The final track had a great riff, fierce drumming from Kishan Balaji and very eerie vocal harmonies, a powerful song to end their performance.

The band announced their new album set to release later this year, which is being produced by Neil Kernon, of Queensryche and Nevermore fame. When asked if this is the next big step for Indian bands i.e., to have internationally produced and marketed albums, frontman Sujay replies, “Definitely. It’s already happening. Not only international producers, but there are also many Indian producers with very good technical skills. In a few years, the Indian rock scene will be self-sufficient and we won’t have to look to the west for everything.”

Bhoomi, Caesar's Palace and TAAQ at the Bengaluru Habba 2012

Next up were Caesar’s Palace   a rock/funk/blues/soul/jazz/disco/phew! band from Bangalore. They played a very groovy, almost dance-y set of songs. They started with a cover of RHCP’s ‘Readymade’ and soon went into originals starting with ‘3 hour love affair’. The bassist Kenneth Wilson’s getup with his hood and shades (at 8:00 in the night) looked exponentially less pretentious with each note he played as he got them grooves going. ‘Stare’ had some funny lyrics about the cliche` of thinking deeper. Unni, the frontman then announced that they were going to cover Bappi Lahiri and frankly, I was disappointed to know that it was a joke. This is one band that could actually pull it off! They did come close to it though as they played a very 80s disco style original called ‘Get Your Mojo On’. By this time, Kishan Balaji had begun to look like some medieval war hero (read madman) behind his drums. He and Jason Zachariah had battled and conquered every style from heavy metal to funk and now even disco, both of them having played for both Bhoomi and Caesar’s palace.

They continued their brand of funk with a sense of humour with ‘Wol Chod’, which had some cool slap bass and screeching wah. ‘Dreams’ had a groove that got the entire amphitheater swinging their heads from side to side and had some interesting guitar and bass harmonies. The song ended with a great keyboard solo. They then went into a very well done medley of Michael Jackson’s ‘Smooth Criminal’ and ‘Don’t Stop Till You Get Enough’ followed by Tenacious D’s ‘Tribute’ that ended with the outro of ‘Stairway to Heaven’ which Unni pulled off perfectly. It was great to see how open minded they are to different genres of music, and not just open minded, but also technically proficient enough to pull off all these varied styles.

Bhoomi, Caesar's Palace and TAAQ at the Bengaluru Habba 2012

The highlight of their performance was ‘I Don’t Need No Doctor’ by Ray Charles, done in a modern John Mayer style. It ended with a jugalbandi of sorts between the guitar and keys. Jason then played a beautiful piano solo that quietly blended into ‘Swim’, a lovely ballad. They ended with ‘Bittersweet Mind’, a typical 12-bar blues song but with some exciting odd-time signature twists to it.

The night was already going on a high when Unni announced that Thermal and a Quarter was going to take to the stage next and caught everyone by surprise. Thermal and a Quarter or TAAQ , as they are popularly known, consists of Bruce Lee Mani on vocals/guitar, Rajeev Rajagopal on drums and Prakash K.N on bass who happen to be Bangalore’s favourite power trio. This was proven by the fact that despite the fact that it was getting late and terribly cold in the open air amphitheater, the audience didn’t seem to want to be anywhere else.

Bhoomi, Caesar's Palace and TAAQ at the Bengaluru Habba 2012

The trio kick-started their set with ‘Can you fly’, a typical TAAQ song with jazzy guitar playing, great vocals and a powerful rhythm section. Their second song was ‘Meter Mele One and a Half’, about the auto-rickshaw drivers in Bangalore. As Bruce Lee Mani sang about the woes of the average Bangalorean, I couldn’t help thinking that the band’s music IS indeed the sound of urban Bangalore. They do sound like UB City at night, like the traffic jams, like Masala Dosas, like an auto-rickshaw’s faulty meter, like Cubbon Park, IT parks and all things Bangalorean.

They continued in the same spirit with some “tapang-blues” with ‘If Them’ and ‘For the Cat’ which got few audience members even doing some tapang moves in the front row, as Bruce himself cheered them on! Quite impressive on the part of the dancers I’d say, considering the fact that ‘For the Cat’ had many time meter changes.

Their next song ‘Birthday’  was dedicated to Rajeev’s mother as it was the eve of her birthday. And apparently it’s no ordinary birthday song. As Bruce explained, “It’s about wanting my birthday to be a space and not a time. Very deep…very deep!” This was followed by one of my personal favourites – TAAQ’s rendition of ‘Hey Jude’. It amazed me to see how they could take a classic as popular as ‘Hey Jude’, turn it upside down and change it around completely and still maintain the feel of the original. TAAQ’s version of the song has to be heard to be believed! Their last song ‘Chainese Item’ sounded like the theme song to a spy movie where everyone’s running behind a plate of chow mein, for some reason. Or maybe the ridiculously cold breeze was finally getting to me!

Thermal and a Quarter were undoubtedly the heroes of the evening, captivating the audience with their distinct sound and energetic performance. Overall, a great gig and a perfect Saturday evening, all three bands providing three different versions of that rock and roll sound we all love.

The moral of the story at the Habba’s rock fest seemed to be that rock fests no longer mean copying the west. As the three veterans showed us, rock music in Bangalore today is more about ourselves and all the things that affect us in our lives. It’s more personal and easy to relate to than ever. I think it’s this quality of the music that made it so enjoyable and is making an increasing number of people turn up for concerts like these.

Avatar photo

Abhishek Prakash

Abhishek Prakash is a Bangalore based guitarist and is a third of local act Groove Chutney. He loves jazz, street food, Woody Allen movies and often pretends to be a writer.

[facebookall_comments]