views
Kshitij Tarey has been the voice of numerous iconic songs like Tose Naina Lage from Anwar, Madno from Lamhaa and Saaware from Shor In The City. With a solid footing in Bollywood, Kshitij Tarey has made his segue into Independent music with a fusion venture that brings two Grammy Awards winners on board. Titled as Classical Crossover, the project serves as an eclectic amalgamation of genres like Classical, Jazz, Funk, Thumri and EDM weaved into songs that are bound to strike a chord with the listeners.
In an exclusive interview with News18 Showsha, Kshitij Tarey talked about his dream project, deconstructed the tracks that are yet to be released, and quipped about the state of Bollywood music in present times and more. When asked about the origin of this project, the singer answered, “Whenever we talk about fusion from last few years, there is an idea that to enjoy fusion, you need to understand Indian Classical, Jazz, Blues or whatever form the artist is using. So I wanted to create an album which is in the fusion zone and can be enjoyed by everyone regardless of whether soembody understands the technicalities of the musical genre. They should enjoy. So the idea came from there and the way I’ve composed, structured everything, it is in a song format. So you will see the tracks are three and a half minute long or four and a half minute long. It’s not like a ten minute fusion track. So it has a very commercial treatment to it. You will not see too many technicalities. It is presented in a way that normal people can groove to it and connect to it emotionally.”
The first song ‘More Ghar Aye- Classical Funk’ released on 24th March on Kshitij Tarey’s official Youtube channel while the audio was out on Strumm Music and other leading platforms. It features Camille Frillex from Paris. The track is a fusion between Indian Classical singing along with Funk and it captures the true essence of the album. Breaking down the song, Kshitij Tarey explained, “I am a huge fan of Bruno Mars. I follow a lot of his work. So I was thinking of creating something that has Indian classical touch and additionally it has a funk feel to it. Funk musically has very high power and has a very prominent bassline. And which gels with the drum. So we are very high on drumming and very high on jazz. So if you notice the track, it starts from a very powerful bassline. It’s a signature bassline. It is something that people will remember that they can recognise..I wanted to use a very heavy bassline with drums and Indian Classical. Since you asked about Raag, I composed the song on Bheempalasi when I started but I wanted to have the feel of very good chord structure also. So just in that Bhimpalasi, I added a shudh nishaad into it to give that funk feel and incorporated the chord structure also. So I used Bhimpalasi as the base but didn’t use pure pure Bhimpalasi. The mukhra and antra is in the bandish format and why I used that shudh nishad is to have the beauty of the chord structure because I wanted to fuse it and didn’t wanted a pure Indian classical track. And for fusion, you have to change a few things according to the other genres. So the point is, if you are doing the fusion, it should not be a forced thing. It should be like the same track has everything. It should be fusion and not confusion. I have created it in a way that it has a song structure, it is enjoyable. It has the essence of Indian classical and the essence of funk.”
Comments
0 comment