Tag Archives: Galeej Gurus

Korn in Bangalore – ‘Path of Totality’ Tour

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Love them, hate them, you can also ignore them. And that’s probably just what you did. Was it condescension or the general disregard for nu-metal, post grunge scene? I would not know really. I for one, was there for a good time and for nostalgia, a delinquent Korn fan that I have been.

A large section of the crowd showed the presence of all kinds. There were some for ‘Korn’, ‘Life is Peachy’, ‘Issues’ etc., some just for ‘Greatest Hits, Vol. 1’ experience, and some more for ‘Path of Totality’ and Skrillex. Whatever the mix of audience, I was expecting a lot of dark, unapologetically repetitive verses, accompanied by hateful fist-pumping and the usual headbanging that follows.

Korn in Bangalore - 'Path of Totality' Tour

If you excuse the absurd calling-off of the Mumbai show, Mooz have pulled off a neat one to begin with. You may want to debate really what was there to manage? No long queues and the sweaty waiting crowd, no pumped up slogans in the air, no charged up atmosphere prior to the show, only a lazy pattern of cars and bikes arriving, you may even confuse the concert entrance with that of a college. And for us, the media – a warm welcome and a cold-hearted update – no entry for cameras before Korn take the stage, and only 10 minutes in the pit to take your shots and get out.

Inside, there was a ridiculously placed (as always) Platinum lounge to the left, the Premium section right in front of the stage with about 50 people, and then the General section, about 50 meters away from the stage. General section is where the fun had already begun, about 200 people were already cheering up for GG, from behind the evil separatist barricades. Few were seated on the matted ground, most were standing, scattered like last few strands of hair on a balding head. Beverage stalls skirted the venue. More people kept pouring in with the pace of ketchup coming out of a bottle.

Korn in Bangalore - 'Path of Totality' Tour

In the past, every time I had wanted to catch Galeej Gurus live, something went wrong – traffic tickets, car crashes and breakdowns included. Anyway, when I finally got to see them, despite being pretty impressed with their talent, the set and the set-up, I found theirs an awfully placed gig. Was it because on top of the legacy-Korn lovers, the new-converts, and the dubstep diggers, the organizers were also expecting an Alt-Rock-Blues crowd? It’s like opening up a Chinese restaurant, inviting Tibetan connoisseurs, and serving continental starters. Can it get any more confusing than this? It could also be some ‘Dubai Desert Rock Festival’ connection where GG had already performed for the same event as Korn.

Korn in Bangalore - 'Path of Totality' Tour

For their set, no matter what Nathan Lee Harris (vocals) tried, for the first few songs he really had to sweat it out more on getting the crowd to react than on doing the singing really. General section, from a place far far away, seemed more receptive to his calls, while the premium seemed more like warming up to the evening, and it was still daylight. Platinum looked more focused on their free beverages and confused as if at an eat-all-you-can stall at a marriage party. Nathan pulled the quick set of 9 songs brilliantly, so did Kishan Balaji (drums), Naveen Thomas Joseph (lead guitar), Matthew Harris (bass), and Ananth Menon (guitars and backing vocals). They played their usual set – ‘Breathe’, ‘Play on’, ‘Leaving Tomorrow’, ‘Make some noise’, ‘Physiological Breakdown’ a.k.a. the one where he pull out the bullhorn, ‘Full meals by the way side’, and a few I could not catch the names of. By the end of it, the energy was almost successfully transmitted into the dull premium and platinum sections too – I saw it, or perhaps I really would like to believe it so much. To sum it up, GG to me sounded like a completely evolved band, so now I can look up to them for more than just the entertaining cover videos online.

Korn in Bangalore - 'Path of Totality' Tour

I had been a Korn fan right until the ‘Unplugged’ experiment and the disaster I think it was. That is when I stopped following them completely. However, ‘Korn III’ still made me smile with whatever I casually got to hear. It sounded more like a return to the roots, but ‘Path of Totality’ was totally something else. It’s a monster of an experiment, a risk, foolhardiness, a project only the one who furiously believes in himself would undertake – or perhaps the one who fears nothing. The album, released in December 2011, features Dubstep, Drum and Bass, and Electro House artists. When I heard Korn are coming to India as a part of the promo tour, I thought it’d be interesting to watch what becomes of the concert, what is performed and what is excused, what is ridiculed and what is enjoyed, what is condemned and what prevails.

Korn in Bangalore - 'Path of Totality' Tour

In a conversation, that was louder than the voices of the remaining crowd put together, some fans sounded divided over whether Korn has a signature sound – some said it doesn’t, many said it does with JD’s vocals, and ‘Munky’ and ‘Heads’s earlier guitar work. That said, each of Korn’s albums does have a distinctive sound – from the rawness of the debut album ‘Korn’, the ambient obscurities of ‘Issues’, or the paradigm shift towards mainstream with ‘See you on the other side’.

The illusive MC announced from behind the equipment on the stage, “Are you ready for Korn?” and the sudden crowd roar made me realize how the venue has started filling up now. “Are you ready for Korn?” and the band’s crew is still getting the sound right. “Are you (muffled eff word)ing ready for Korn?” and the mic-stand is being screwed to the stage. Louder – “Give it up for Korn” and the official intro video for the POT tour starts to play. With slow walks, without a word, the band members take their respective positions and then as they energetically plunge into performing their earlier tracks – ‘Divine’, ‘Predictable’, ‘No place to hide’, and ‘Good God’ – the crowd comes alive, just like cumin seeds suddenly thrown on a hot frying pan, and there’s panic in the pit, shutters firing like machine guns on/in a battlefield.

Korn in Bangalore - 'Path of Totality' Tour

The crowd was still in a nodding mode, while Korn front-man Jonathan Davis, was instantly connected to the music, giving the mic stand a hard time, head banging, throwing his neck as if hammering a nail into the ground with it, while his long tresses looked like a hundred whips slapping the air.The digitally enhanced stage lights transcended an oversaturated spectrum, projecting convulsing, speedy images, every audible boom complemented by a visual blast.

Fieldy’s bass drove the initial groove making the highs flashy, Munky’s guitars made the lows quirky, JD’s high pitched voice varied from savage to vulnerable, garnished with piercing screams and curious grunts, and nothing changed when the set entered the dubstep part, only enhanced by Ray Luzier’s electronically enhanced beats. The pads were also a part of the drums-island he was sitting on anyway. The crowd cheered, with the enthusiasm of kids screaming at the arrival of the candy-man afterschool.

Korn in Bangalore - 'Path of Totality' Tour

‘Narcissistic Cannibal’, ‘Kill Mercy Within’, ‘Chaos Lives in Everything’, ‘My Wall’, ‘Get Up’, and ‘Way Too Far’ were performed from the album Korn are touring to promote and I was pleasantly surprised at this live rendition of the dubstep record – it seemed far less dizzy and overwhelming, not over-simulated, to me than the CD versions. Inspired by their very lyrics I exclaimed – Chaos didn’t live in everything here. In fact, thanks to the switch to dubstep at this concert, the dullness died and we witnessed the rise of the fits and banging of heads. This is where the band took a break, and also around the same time when the management decided to let general sections merge. Thankfully now there were more people around, to feel like a party.

After a rather long break, they returned with the hits, ‘Here to Stay’, ‘Freak on a Leash’ and ‘Falling away from me’ and then a familiar sound – one of their greatest hits, a cover – the intro of ‘Another Brick in the Wall – I, II, III’ and the ‘Good-bye Cruel World’ outro in tandem. We don’t need no Korn to excite us really to sing our lungs and intestines out at this one, and so we did – enhanced moderately by one free can of beer (thanks to the premium class) and hugely by the rain Gods coming to the show. The bagpiper too came into play as the band just didn’t want to mar the hysteria, the intro for ‘Shoots & Ladders’ rigged with Metallica’s ‘One’. ‘Got the Life’ was another pleasant surprise, making the set running longer than usual. They concluded the proceedings with a well built-up, splendid but deceptively easy drum solo and ‘Blind’, followed with expression of gratitude for everyone who came to the show, and especially for Mooz, with lot of hugs and handshakes on the stage.

Korn in Bangalore - 'Path of Totality' Tour

Poor crowd turnout was the only sour thing I remember about the show, but I won’t say my interest in Korn has been revived. The curious path they have taken with a simulated totality may make the point that they still have got the life, but will there be no turning back to the roots – only JD knows. For now, dubstep takes a part of him.

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Gaurrav Tiwari

Drummer at DIARCHY, and HR Manager at Genpact

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Korn and Galeej Gurus at Clarks Exotica, Bangalore

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Galeej Gurus at Hard Rock Cafe, Hyderabad

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Galeej Gurus

Named as one of India’s “hottest bands” according to Rolling Stones in 2010, the opening act for bands like Mr. Big, Deep Purple, Bryan Adams;  and having played in Dubai Dessert Rock Festival alongside bands like Velvet Revolver, Korn, Killswitch Engage, As I Lay Dying, Galeej Gurus is a force to reckon with. Their growing fan club in Hyderabad couldn’t wait to listen to them yet again and could barelty contain their excitement. Formed in the year 2000, the Galeej Gurus have been in the music scene for over a decade with over 500 gigs in their kitty. Their line-up includes Nathan Harris on vocals, Naveen Thomas on the guitars, Ananth Menon on guitars and vocals, Matthew Harris on the bass and Kishan Balaji on the drums.

Galeej Gurus at Hard Rock Cafe, Hyderabad

As a band, their influences are Led Zeppelin, Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Eric Clapton, Steve Vai and Deep Purple. However individually, Nathan’s influences include Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Guns n Roses, Robbie Williams, Prince etc., while Ananth tips towards blues and rock and roll. Matthew draws his inspiration from modern guitar funk and rock, for Naveen Thomas, who is considered the “most technically proficient” musician in the band, it is more of progressive influences like Dream Theater, Pain of Salvation, Tool, Killswitch Engage etc. , and Kishan is inspired by “freestyle improvisation” and jazz. A blend of their individuality is the essence of their band. Galeej Gurus’ music, according to them, is a bit of Alternative, Funk, Blues-Rock, Progressive and Grunge put together; whereas critics classify them as Indie Rock.

Galeej Gurus at Hard Rock Cafe, Hyderabad

Their set list for the day was a mix of their compositions and covers. The band opened with their own composition ‘Believe in Tomorrow’, to warm up the crowd. Picking up pace, their OCs ‘She’s Mine’, ‘Play On’, Jet’s ‘Cold Hard B*tch’ got the crowd pumped up.  Ananth’s bluesy voice was perfect for the cover of Eric Clapton’s ‘Before You Accuse Me’. ‘Blind’, ‘Make some Noise’,’ Dark Hungry Eyes’ were the rest of their OCs for the first half of the evening. By the second half of the gig, the crowd grew bigger and the energy grew higher. This second set included 3 Doors Down’s ‘Loser’ along with Maroon 5’s ‘Move like Jagger’ and another composition ‘Flyaway’. The crowd sang along during Foo Fighter’s ‘Rope’ and King’s of Leon’s ‘Use Somebody’, while the band continued on with their other compositions ‘Breathe’ and ‘Physiological Breakdown’. The finale was a medley of three rock legends – Led Zeppelin’s ‘Whole lotta love’, Jimi Hendrix’s ‘Purple Haze’ and Lenny Kravitz’s ‘Are you gonna go my way’ leading to ‘Full meals’  by The Wayside. They threw in a few amazing guitar and bass solos and pulled in Baba – Native Tongue’s  frontman and a good friend of the band for one of the numbers, which added to the overall flavour.

Galeej Gurus at Hard Rock Cafe, Hyderabad

Every composition of theirs has a bit of Alternative and Progressive while most of them were groovy. Nathan’s versatile vocals, Naveen Thomas and Ananth’s skills on the guitar, crazy bass riffs by Matthew and Kishan’s tight drumming put together, makes a perfectly wrapped package of good music.

The sound was decent with very few glitches and there were quite a good number of people for a weekday evening. As the front man, Nathan knew how to keep the crowd engaged throughout the gig.  The energy of the entire band was so contagious, they crowd couldn’t contain themselves. Everyone was high on music (also on booze, but mostly music) till the end.

Galeej Gurus at Hard Rock Cafe, Hyderabad

Galeej Gurus claim that they are “a bunch of crazy ass rockers who don’t understand the meaning of ‘keep it quiet!’” and they sure kept their word! After a week of rain and traffic jams, an evening with Galeej Gurus at Hard Rock Café was the perfect way to unwind.

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Vini Lilian

Vini works with an ad agency. She's a metalhead who can't play metal so she writes about it. She loves tattoos!

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Galeej Gurus at Hard Rock Cafe, Hyderabad

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Trinadh Rakesh

Trinadh Rakesh believes photography is a way of capturing life’s various reflections, which is why he loves to experiment in different genres. His effort is to tell a story with every moment that he captures!

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Allegro Fudge at The BFlat Bar, Bangalore

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Allegro Fudge – a contemporary acoustic rock band had a modest crowd gathered at The BFlat Bar in Indiranagar on the 8th of June to listen to music from their new album Maximum City. Strong influences of jazz, pop and folk music make for their unique sound. The band seemed to be enjoying every second on stage and kept the small assembly of enthusiastic listeners near the stage thoroughly engaged.

Allegro Fudge at The BFlat Bar, Bangalore

The show kicked off at 9 p.m. with ‘Hear Them Say, a bluesy tune that I enjoyed a lot. The song has a nice up- tempo break in between which adds some oomph to their sound. The first thing that struck me when Allegro Fudge opened their set is that they are all individually very talented musicians. The band went on to play ‘Far Away’ and ‘Yellow by Coldplay. The keyboard forms an important part of their sound and is almost a lead instrument in itself. The keyboardist, Jason Zacharaiah, added a level of complexity to the sound which kept the music engaging. I really enjoyed the “blues face” he’d make when it was his time to jam out! The band followed with some more originals, ‘Colors Fly’, ‘Day Dreamer’ and ‘˜Waiting’. The crowd really got going by now and a few people could be seen dancing animatedly to the music. Anish’s guitar work was particularly enjoyable on the latter part of the setlist. The drummer, Kishan Balaji, also did a fantastic job throughout the set and played with a lot of feel and dynamics.

Allegro Fudge at The BFlat Bar, Bangalore

Allegro Fudge then went ahead to play the classic ‘Ain’t No Sunshine’ originally by Bill Withers and this proved to be an instant crowd pleaser with people joining in with the singing here and there. Vocalist Saahas Patil has a sweet choir-boy voice which is soulful and easy on the ears. They followed up with ‘Rock All Night’, their heaviest number so to speak and this was one of the more memorable moments of the night. The barefoot Shalini Mohan did a really good job on this track playing bass and the song also featured a bass-vocal duel.  They followed with ‘Adrift’, ‘Goodbye’, ‘Eye To Eye’ and ‘Time After Time‘ by Cindy Lauper. The overall sound of the band was tame and I was disappointed that they opted to play more easy-to-listen-to covers than their heavier and darker tunes like ‘City Of Sin’ and ‘Constant Paralysis.’

Allegro Fudge at The BFlat Bar, Bangalore

They ended their set with ‘When We’re Gone’, ‘Maximum City‘ and ‘Hey Jude’. The Beatles cover was a good concluding track with the audience singing along and Saahas walking off the stage with his mike to egg people on to join in, to which they readily obliged. Galeej Gurus’ guitarist Ananth Menon then took over the vocal and guitar duties and played some blues for us with the remainder of Allegro Fudge helping out and at this point, the audience just didn’t seem to want to leave. Most of the tracks Allegro Fudge played can be found on their new album which is out online and is soon to be released on disk. The band still has a lot of work to do in terms of keeping their scarce live performances a little more engaging with more stage presence but Allegro Fudge is most definitely a band to watch out for!

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Galeej Gurus at Mount Carmel College, Bangalore

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Dev Ambardekar

Dev is a music photographer based out of Bangalore. He has been documenting the music scene actively for almost two years during which he has shot several Indian bands and a handful international acts. His expertise ranges from multi-day music festivals to pub shows. While he is not behind the camera, Dev is an Architect and occasional writer. You can follow him at @DevAmbardekar.

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Twenty Years in Music with The Chronic Blues Circus

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Peter Isaac has been a pioneer of Blues music in Bangalore city, and an inspiration to many artistes. His love for music and his enthusiasm to watch new artistes is always encouraging. When I first found out that Peter Isaac was celebrating 20 years in music with his band The Chronic Blues Circus, I knew I had to be there to show my support to this local legend. The event proposed to bring on stage, musicians that he has played with in the past.

Twenty musicians, twenty years, one stage – it had all the makings of a night of crazy blues jams. The gig was held at Counter Culture (Whitefield) and needless to say, it was quite a drive! Having been to Counter Culture a couple of times before, I knew that I could expect the best sound and a great evening with the band. The place was completely packed! There were a lot of people there, and it was so reassuring to see such support for local artistes. The venue was decked-out with its eccentric variety of decor. They seem to change it every time I’m there. I love this about the venue because it gives each band a unique flavour and really adds to the experience.

As I walked in, the band was belting out the B.B.King classic ‘Rock Me Baby’, with Sylvester on the vocals. The cover was pretty interesting, and kudos to Sylvester for having pulled off such a tight track. They then moved on to their own rendition of ‘Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood’. After Sylvester went off-stage, Ananth, of Galeej Gurus fame, went on with ‘Bad Love’. Having played with Ananth on blues numbers before, he didn’t really surprise me with his tight vocals and face-melting guitar licks.

The line-up kept changing through the night, and one thing I noticed through the whole evening was how the band kept the guest musicians going without being intrusive. The band kept to their space without trying play over the guests, even though this was their gig. It was truly heart-warming to watch how the whole community got together in a supportive and non-competitive environment. The set proceeded with Owen, the bass guitarist singing some numbers. Next up, Steve, of Millenium fame, went up on stage with his over the top antics, and brought the night to a screaming climax.

Just when I thought the gig was about to close, Karan Joseph, Venkat Subramaniyam and Hemanth, took to the stage. At this point we had on stage, Abhilash on Drums, Mariam on guitar, Peter Isaac on guitar, Owen on bass, Vasudev on Harmonica, Abe on Harmonica, Steve on guitar, Ananth on guitar, Karan on the keys, Hemanth on guitar, and Venkat on vocals. With all of this madness going on, and Venkat talking over mike trying to get everybody on the same page, the band started playing ‘Crossroads’, a classic blues number pulled off amazingly well for 11 musicians on the stage! The night came to an end at fever pitch with another Clapton number, ‘Ramblin’ On My Mind’.

I left the gig thoroughly satisfied. The brilliant music, the most supportive and kind musicians, and a great venue all thrown together in one evening. And, I still can’t believe I was at a gig like this!

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Bharath Kumar

Bharath Kumar, besides being a full-time geek, is a keyboard player and music producer. He runs his own studio, Minim Sound Labs www.minimsoundlabs.com, and is an active volunteer in various charities.

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ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

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We were late. 2:30 p.m. on a Sunday just can’t be viewed as a strict time to start anything, so we rocked up well into Allegro Fudge’s set. They were really in the heat of it and quite an audience had already assembled.

You really can’t underestimate the power of The Beatles, and after ‘Colours Fly’, Allegro Fudge truly erupted with ‘Hey Jude’ – was it ‘Gay Dude’, or did we mishear? They filled up the 40 feet ceiling of Toit’s central area: sound guys got stuff down tight! Sahaas was in his element more than I’ve ever seen him before, heavily involved with an adoring audience. The rest of the evening was no different, the crowd today was really happy to be there, loved everything, and waited patiently for more. Allegro had a new bassist as well: she hasn’t confirmed joining them full time, so I guess we hang tight and wait for the big news. A bass change could be fairly significant in the long run as we’ve already seen with TAAQ quite recently.

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

Toit of course, has the best pizza in a 100 km. radius (they’re slipping a touch, but still), and a stage that has been dying to be played on. It’s set about halfway up a three storey open plan which sets itself up for a very relaxed jam atmosphere. The frontman though, has to end up targeting five to six different audience locations. It is heaps of fun to watch, and I imagine it’s an absolute joy to play. What they’ve entirely ignored: any lighting whatsoever! The announcer keeps calling the event “unplugged”. It’s anything but for a music school they’ve sure got some basic terminology mixed up. Semantics aside, we do need more mini-festival type situations. Sunday arvo jam time!

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

Toit is also quite scattered over the three floors and they’ve done what I’ve always hoped someone would do: covered each separate area in speakers so there’s sound from everywhere instead of just from the stage. Gives people a chance to spread themselves out and just chill on an overcast Sunday. They even separated sets with some Sufjan Stevens – new music, in a Bangalore pub, you’d have to be there to believe it!

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

I’d never heard Illuminati before, so the incredible rock-voice threw me entirely off guard. The man packs a punch. ‘Joker and The Thief’ was close enough to them kicking the door in, breathing fireballs and blowing the windows out. Sadly, they lost track with Porcupine Tree where neither the vocalist nor the drummer seemed comfortable at all. Their own stuff was where they settled back in though. Funk groove, nonchalant vocal line and a guitar midriff that was just tough as nails. I think they may have you believe they also have something to say. The band hiatus finally showed through with ‘Roadhouse Blues’, which ended up being entirely off, but well, entertaining nonetheless and everybody was happy to sing along to an old favourite. They peaked at ‘TNT’, where all their dangly bits come together for the perfect storm of no-nonsense rocking like our forefathers intended. They even threw in a super slow bounce version of ‘Killin’ In The Name Of’, and a rock version of  ‘Come Together’ (Beatles again!). If they’re really on a comeback I’d watch them again, but they need to buckle down and work at it.

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

Side rant: There’s still a tendency in India to call things “own comps” rather than run with it as a natural part of a show. It’s a small thing, but it recognizes the idea that Indian bands writing their own stuff is still out of the ordinary. We’re past college festivals; we’re all grown up now and can handle new, original music from local bands.

People on the top floor seemed more at ease and on their own trip: the band kept them entertained when conversation slipped. All in all: “This is just, such a cool Sunday evening!”

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

With Matthew stuck in traffic or otherwise delayed, Naveen picked up bass and toyed around for a solid ten-minute bass solo with acoustic backing. Everybody was really just out to have a good time and Mr. Thomas really can’t disappoint. Galeej Gurus setup the way I’d hoped, tall chairs along the front and an added acoustic guitar – a little more personal, connected to the audience and living up to the “unplugged” idea. Matthew took longer than expected though and an hour and a half, a ‘Redemption Song’ and ‘The Boxer’ later, you’d be forgiven to believe a late evening family sing-along was in full swing.

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

And bam! The bassist was in and the whole band kicked in for real. They were doing great acoustic kickbacks of their songs, giving the “unplugged” name some juice. They have been my favourite Indian band for years now, so there’s nothing but school-girl like adoration from me. They continually make me want to be a bonafide rocker myself. Nathan oozes cool, even sitting down, and incidentally makes the best burgers in Bangalore (he owns Hole In The Wall, Koramangala). Listen to them lots, and go eat there, I command you!

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

Acoustic Guitar Man turns out to be a fantastic addition. A superb set of backing pipes and he tears through solos as well. If he’s permanent, they’re setting up to really do some damage. And if there’s anything that would prove that beyond a shadow of a doubt, it’s them doing ‘Use Somebody’ in the middle of the set with the entire, and I mean entire, packed-to-the-friggin’-rafters, crowd singing along. We got through an entire first verse courtesy audience happy-singing.

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

And Thermal and a Quarter. I think they’re an interesting case study. It’s very complex music, they’ve been doing it for quite a while now, and Prakash is only adding more twists: changing old feel-goods into epics, even bordering on self-indulgence but lovable no less. In a city where the single English music radio station puts out the most inane crap the world has to offer with a mere smattering of some golden pop a year too late, it’s truly refreshing to have a pub-full scream for smooth sax jazz over Thermal signature anti-gravity blues. The best drummer I know, of course he can play away physics.

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

Thermal is on quite a metamorphosis, this is the point where you catch all the gigs you can – it’s all building to something and you don’t want to be missing out. A saxophone really suits them and it looks like they’ll be able to have a lot of fun with it, so I hope they can add Sax Man on more often. Or maybe a horn section. Any brass would do it.

ILM Unplugged at TOIT, Bangalore

The cops turned up at this point. The neighbours weren’t fans of any of it and Toit does bump uglies with residential Indiranagar, so I can’t imagine this is going to go away easily. There were troubles with an open space – noise spread. Mr. Complaining Neighbour, just wait till the metro starts.

“There’s a saying Milo – If it’s too loud, you’re too old.”

Tell me you know what flick that’s from.

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Ashim D'Silva

Ashim D'Silva is a grinner. He's a lover. And a sinner. He plays his music in the sun. He daylights as a web designer, bicycles everywhere, and bought his first real shirt last year. You should bring him a sandwich. With bacon, and avocado.

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Interview with Galeej Gurus

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Galeej Gurus is a band of talented guys, all fluent in the same universal language – music. The fresh sound of such a union has, naturally, made many people sit up and take notice; and has resulted in widespread recognition and a string of awards from across the country. WTS got talking to band members Nathan Lee Harris (vocals), Naveen Thomas (guitars), Matthew Harris (bass) , Ananth Menon (guitars) and Kishan Balaji (drums) and here’s what they had to say about the band, their music and more…

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

Ananth: It has been ten years; Mathew Nathan and I started the band in college, it’s been on and off, many people have come and left. This is a sort of final line up. The journey has been quite fun, we’ve gone to and played at all sorts of places and for all sorts of crowds. It has been a lot of fun!

WTS: Why did you call the band Galeej Gurus?

Ananth: No reason really. It’s a just nice name! (laughs)

WTS: How has the band transformed in terms of band members?

Matthew: We had a couple of guys from college in the band when we started out as a college band. But everyone had their careers to take care of, so they moved on, we replaced them. Some guys just couldn’t deal with the pressures of practice, wanted something else, or just wanted to do something more serious, so they went ahead with it. We changed a lot of guys. I think this is the final line up that we have.

Naveen: The current line-up has been together since 2007. Kishan was the last to join. I joined the band a couple of years ago before Kishan did. The rest of the line-up has been exactly the same. The actual core of the band that was formed was Mathew, Nathan and Ananth. I joined in the end of 2004 and Kishan joined in 2007.I kept bumping into these guys even before I went to Chennai to study. I wasn’t playing music at that point of time, but I knew these guys.

Interview with Galeej Gurus

WTS: How do you approach your songwriting process? Tell us about your lyrics, the themes/concepts etc. Where do you draw influences from?

Ananth: Things that happen in your daily life, how day to day things will affect you, of course some love and hate, how we interact with the world, I suppose.

Naveen: I think the key is to just be something that people can relate to very easily. It’s not something that is so social that it’s very niche. We want it to be everyday common problems, we want it to be stuff that we go through everyday, things that you can relate to. That’s what our music is about.

WTS: Could you briefly describe the music-making process?

Naveen: We sit outside and chat for a very long time, not about the song at all. We get in and then we come up with some ideas, it could be somebody coming up with a groove or a riff, and then we try to put something around it. This actually works for you or sometimes against you. We start with a lot of ideas, a lot of stuff remains half finished, and they are slotted as half finished. It’s just the ones that we take and polish up, which becomes a song.

Interview with Galeej Gurus

WTS: What are your rehearsals generally like?

Naveen: Time is actually sacrificed.

Ananth: If you have to meet and jam then you have to meet and jam, that’s it, nothing else.

Naveen: We practice at different time slots. It all boils down to how we can shuffle the commitments around. There isn’t a clear cut time for practice.

WTS: Do you have a set time each week in which you practice or are rehearsals more spontaneous?

Ananth: Oh no no, it has to be set, we have too many things going on in our lives, its needs to be set.

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

Ananth: It’s not an exclusive relationship,but it is a relationship.

Naveen: It’s definitely a relationship. It’s like friendship. Just because I’m a friend of somebody doesn’t mean that I won’t be friends with somebody else. Our level of commitment to various friendships are different. I think that’s how you play music as well.

Interview with Galeej Gurus

WTS: Do you believe in the concept of “band leaders”? Or do you think each member is an important and equal asset?

Ananth: When you’re writing a song everyone’s equal. But I think every band needs a face. You need a face up there. That’s why Nathan stopped playing the drums. I think it’s important that every band has a frontman.

WTS: How do you deal with creative differences and stick together?

Ananth: You sort the problem amongst yourselves, there’s nothing else you can do. If you let it hang up your music, it’s not going to get anywhere.

Naveen: I definitely believe that problems happen and at some point of time you must let it be. The time that we travel serves as a great bonding time. I think we do a lot of talking there, communication is very important. There’s a point when you go sit and say, “I think something’s really not working here, how can we sort that out?”

Ananth: Yeah like any good relationship.

Naveen: But the key thing is, everything normally gets a lot less complex when you go up on stage. Because just that vibe of playing music together sorts it out. I think that’s the coolest thing about playing music. It’s like when you work on a project, there’ a little bond that’s formed among the team members. All the differences get forgotten. It’s the same with music.

Interview with Galeej Gurus

WTS: If you guys were to describe yourself in simple words, what would you say?

Ananth: I don’t think I would, I wouldn’t tell anybody. I tell them come for our gig, we’re playing and stuff. That’s pretty much what I do. I don’t like telling people what the band is about, you should decide for yourself. I prefer people coming. Fun loving rockers, is what I’d call us!

Naveen: I think the cool thing about the band is when we play on stage it’s just about having fun, you feel that vibe, and there’s a lot more energy with the band. I would normally tell people if you really want to know what the band is about, come for the gig. And then you can form the opinion that you want about the band.

WTS: Have you had your share of criticism?

Naveen: Whenever you’re around for some time, everyone has something to say about you. I think it’s a good thing, that means you’re worth talking about. I like that. I don’t even care what people say, because as long as they are talking about me its fine!

Ananth: They’ve said everything, they look like idiots on stage, he can’t play guitar, he can’t play bass, the drummer is too loud!

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Priyanka Shetty

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

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