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| Jeet Das, Supratik Ghosh, Souvik Mukherjee
and Saumya Shanker (left to right) on the banks of the
Hooghly |
In
filmmaker Sujoy Ghoshs cult hit Jhankaar Beats,
a group of advertising executives nurse a dream to form
their own band and launch a music album, even as they worship
R D Burman and lug drums around in the boots of their cars.
Ghosh might have taken a leaf out of the lives of the members
of Bangalore band Aurko ? with the difference that these
particular RD worshippers have actually lived out the Jhankaar
Beats dream.
With the launch of their maiden
Indipop album Nadiyaa, Aurko has chosen to go a route
only a few Indian bands have gone before ?releasing original
Hindi non-film music. The music video of their signature
song Nadiyaa ? an ode to the city of Calcutta ? is
catching the imagination of viewers even as it is played
repeatedly on music channels, while their album released
by Times Music is steadily making its way up the charts.
The story of how a small group
of dedicated music lovers from Bangalore managed to release
a pop album in Hindi with an established label, even as
they climbed the corporate ladder as managers and executives,
is an inspiring one.
The six-year-old bands journey
probably started when lead singer Supratik Ghosh, whose
day-time avatar is that of GM, sales and marketing of a
leading advertising agency, was transferred to Bangalore
from Mumbai. Supratik came from film and music stock ? singer
Geeta Dutt was his grandmothers sister and his father
Shyamol Ghosh was a director ? and he had already cut his
teeth in music by reaching the semi-finals of popular TV
talent hunt Sa Re Ga Ma. Just before I was
sent to Bangalore, I had been on the verge of establishing
real contacts and making successful forays into the Mumbai
music scene, recalls Supratik. Being sent to
Bangalore seemed like a punishment, but it turned out to
be blessing in disguise, he says.
Chance meetings with Souvik Mukherjee,
an engineer who is the bands other lead singer, Aakash
(whos not a part of the band any more) and IIT-ian
Saumya Shanker, who works in the financial services sector,
kicked off the process that culminated with the release
of the album. They started with doing covers of Hindi songs
for Durga Puja functions, moved on to corporate events and
did close to 200 live shows before another chance meeting
spurred them on to write and compose their own music. Meanwhile,
some people left, and others joined in, such as bass guitarist
Jeet Das who is a part of the core group now.
At a show at Planet M, the band
met Ravi Bhatnagar, VP, marketing of Times Music. He
gave us the confidence to start work on our original compositions,
recalls Supratik. I think we had been moving towards
that for some time, and his encouragement just gave us the
final spark, adds Saumya.
Having recorded the album, they
did the rounds of music labels and were almost signed up
by Sony Music in 2005, when an unexpected blow fell. The
label decided to hold back on launching any new voices to
support the channels reality show winners, and it
looked like one phone call would end a dream that had been
in the making for six years. The day we were told
Sony could not sign us up was perhaps the worst day of our
lives. We couldnt talk, couldnt sleep the whole
night. It was a really bad time, says Supratik. But
soon Times Music stepped in and the album was very much
on its way.
Melody and fresh voices are Aurkos
strengths, and they are refreshingly honest about the fact
that they are catering to the masses ? no highbrow pretensions
here. We want our songs to be hummed by a maid as
she sweeps the floor, by a chauffeur as he drives his masters
car, says Supratik. They have made melody-based music
and a very Bollywood-ish sensibility their own and are unabashedly
populist.
What they do offer, according
to them, is a value-for-money album. Its not
the kind of album where the video song is the only one worth
listening to while the others are just there to make up
the numbers, asserts mild-mannered Saumya. Their music
has folk and tribal elements ? while Nadiyaa has
a Bhatiyali refrain, Dholna has strains from an Assamese
folk song and Kaho Na makes use of traditional Indian
instruments such as the sarod and tanpura.
Shooting the video for Nadiyaa
in Calcutta was a first-time experience for most of the
members ? it left them slightly wet behind the ears and
pretty much everywhere else. Since water is the overwhelming
theme of the song, we were drenched almost throughout the
three-day shoot in the middle of a rather cold December,
grins Supratik. The shoot had other harum-scarum moments,
such as director Oni Sen ordering Supratiks wife Lalpi
to act in the video after an actress had dropped out. Those
three days were completely mad, but total fun, they
say in chorus.
The whole project has been almost
a family venture ? with Lalpi and Saumyas wife Soma
writing the lyrics, doing PR and graphics work for the band
and other friends chipping in with important back-stage
work. The fact that our non-performing friends work
tirelessly for the band without a share of the limelight
and glamour shows that they really believe in the music.
This gives us a lot of strength, says Saumya.
What also helps are the discipline
and work ethics instilled in them by the corporate world.
Even with demanding jobs and upwardly spiralling careers,
the band manages to find time to practice, ideate and chill
out together. I think we have a good mix of creativity
and discipline, and thats helped us a lot, says
Supratik. Of course, the creative side of their lives is
set to escalate now with the release of the album and the
large numbers of shows that they have committed to ? but
a little bit of clever time management should be able to
cover that, they feel. Besides live shows, they also have
the release of the second video for the song Puchhe Ye
Dil Se to look forward to, as also other on-ground activities.
A tie-up with Caf? Coffee Day promises that their CDs and
cassettes will be sold from the caf? chains 300 outlets
soon. The release of the second video will also be followed
up with what they are calling the Whats Your
Story campaign,a programme that will encourage visitors
to Caf? Coffee Day to relate incidents of being misunderstood
by loved ones in a fast-paced life ? the theme of the song
Puchhe Ye Dil Se.
They might be the new kids on
the block, but Aurko sure knows how to play its audience
the right way. |