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Baul music, adds Parvathy
Baul, another well-known singer, keeps evolving, and is therefore a living
tradition. She has been taking the music to areas outside Bengal with her
husband Ravi Gopalan Nair, who belongs to Kerala. “We have organised Baul
concerts in villages in Kerala,” she says.
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But over the years, the
profile of the audience has been changing, with a spate of domestic and
international festivals, and with popular Bangla bands taking up Baul
tunes. Bands such as ‘Bhoomi’ and Bonnie Chakraborty’s ‘Oikyotaan’ too
have been highlighting Baul music. “Oikyotaan means a thousand melodies
transforming into a unique song. The idea was to make folk music accessible to
a global audience,” says Chakraborty. The founder and lead singer of ‘Bhoomi’,
Surajit Chatterjee, stresses that the appeal of Baul music is universal. “More
often than not, the theme is spiritual; it spreads the message of brotherhood,
love for fellow human beings and common folk. Considering the turbulence in our
society, these songs soothe our soul,” he says.
It’s not difficult to make
Baul geeti match
contemporary music, the singers stress. “Keeping with the spirit of Baul music
that keeps including the new, our compositions often merge with contemporary
music influences,” adds Chatterjee. “The drum, guitar, violin, keyboards and
English flutes play along with traditional instruments such as the khamak, ektara, dupki and ghungroo when the instruments
gel with the mood of the song.” Clearly, Bauls — who celebrate life — are not
going to hang up their ektaras.
The voice of the bard is as clear as ever.