The Sunday Guardian

Imported in the 1920s, the jazz legacy lives on in the music of Indian bands

- KEITH A. GOMES

Jazz came into being in the early half of the 20th century. It would perhaps interest people to know that as jazz took over the USA, with its politicall­y charged essence and its sense of freedom from a subjecting order, it also gathered momentum here in India. Jazz made its way into India in the 1920s, around the same time when it was looming in the States. It was in 1935 that jazz settled in Bombay and Calcutta. The rest is history.

Jazz, to a layperson, is notorious as a complex chimera. One cannot simply explain it even if one enjoys it — but one enjoys it, and that’s the point. Jazz is subject to impression­s and sensitivit­y, rather than being able to be conveyed simply through spoken or written words. Among the only aspects that one can pin down, in the most limited understand­ing, is the quality of “improvisat­ion” that can be heard. The swing, notes of equal time being performed with unequal durations, and the blue notes are discernibl­e traits — if not in written definition then surely in the auditory experience of Jazz. To put it even simply, jazz feels like a play with notes, you can tell the intentiona­l movement in the irregulari­ties.

In India, jazz was taken up, in feisty spirits, by musicians in Goa, Bombay, Calcutta and Pune. And now, jazz finds an evident presence in all major metropolit­ans, including the national capital. The genre has boomed in this country, not simply by the influx of various artists from the global scene, but also because Indian musicians have absorbed it. There is a great variety of India-born musicians who have gathered credibilit­y as Jazz artists. Here are some of those bands that have been travelling the country and are well-seasoned performers. HFT Arjun Sen (Guitar) Sam Shullai (Drums) Harshil Misra (Bass) HFT is a jazz Trio, which uses three alphabets for its title. HFT play World Jazz, which can be called urbane and savvy. The band plays original music which is defined by its slow groove. They claim to be influenced by a wide variety of genres like Prog rock, Funk, Bebop, Latin Jazz and the obvious Indian Classical. SYNCOPATIO­N Rishie Raaj Sachdeva (Guitars) Jayant Manchanda (Bass) Nikhil Vasudevan (Drums) Sycopation is a Jazz trio which was formed back in 2009. They are pretty clear on what they like (and also what they dislike) as far as jazz is concerned. Their work revolves around Contempora­ry Jazz, which shows a glare of Funk in it. Audiences characteri­se their musical performanc­es as soulful, energetic and also full of ‘ improvisat­ions’ — which makes them an ideal jazz show.

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