Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Vancouver-Based Band Delhi 2 Dublin To Reveal 'Hidden World Of Bhangra' In A Documentary

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Dec, 2016 01:20 PM
    After shooting a video in Mumbai's Dharavi, considered Asia's largest slum, Vancouver-based world music group Delhi 2 Dublin, that comprises a mix of Canadians and Indo-Canadians, is set to put the spotlight on the "hidden world of bhangra" in their upcoming documentary.
     
    The electronic pop-bhangra fusion band launched the official music video of "We're All Desi", shot with the local cast and crew in Dharavi slum earlier this year. Now, they are working on a documentary on bhangra -- a genre of Punjabi dance and music.
     
    "At the moment, we are shooting a documentary on the 'hidden world of bhangra'. Trying to shed light on this subculture of Punjabi music in Vancouver that has such deep roots here (India), and also in the UK. We'll be travelling to Punjab later this month," Tarun Nayar, the band's DJ and tabla player, told in an email interview.
     
     
    The band, which also consists of Sanjay Seran, Ravi Binning, James Hussain and Serena Eades, will show India in a good light. But generally, when international films -- including Oscar-winner "Slumdog Millionaire" -- choose India as a backdrop, the focus is on poverty or other social evils.
     
    How does such representation of the country affect him? Nayar says that, as the children of Indian immigrants to North America, "we take issue with the systemic misrepresentation of Indian culture in mainstream western media".
     
     
    "It's so annoying! We're vocal about it both in our music and in our online and real-life personas. And it's not just Indian culture that is fetishised and exotified for easy consumption of the mainstream -- it is all narratives outside the conventional white, straight-male perspective," he said.
     
    Talking about "We're All Desi", he said the video was the brainchild of videographer Kedar Sonigra.
     
    "We were on a flight together last year, jamming about how to tell a story around our song 'we're all desi'. He pitched the idea for the video, we loved it, and he worked really hard to make it happen. Playing around with classic Bollywood themes in a non-conventional representation of a 'slum' appealed to us -- it challenges our stereotypes," he said.
     
     
    So, any Bollywood dreams?
     
    "We are working on a small Bollywood project. Loving it," he said.
     
    Right now, they are pumped-up about their Indian tour, which will conclude on December 17 in Bengaluru. "So excited. After our trip to India last year, which included SulaFest and Jaipur Lit fest, we just couldn't wait to come back," said Nayar.
     
    And their fans in India must be overjoyed as Delhi 2 Dublin is not restricted to just one genre.
     
    "We've never been too concerned about fitting into a genre or getting radio or TV play. I guess, from the outset our music was so weird that those things weren't an option for us.
     
    "So we just make whatever music we like. Ranging from really folky to really electronic. And over the years, as we've grown, so too have our tastes and the music we represent."
     
     
    He says the band, which was formed 10 years ago, didn't really strategically pick any form, but agrees they have a strong bhangra influence as "2.5 of our members are Punjabi".

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Raunchy East Coast Web Series Makes Plans For A Movie: 'Pogey Beach'

    Raunchy East Coast Web Series Makes Plans For A Movie: 'Pogey Beach'
    But on Pogey Beach — a fictional soap opera based in a beach on Prince Edward Island's north shore — it's not unusual to see an Islander who collects employment insurance sinking their steel toe shoes into the red sand.

    Raunchy East Coast Web Series Makes Plans For A Movie: 'Pogey Beach'

    Woman Trying To Catch Pokemon In Cemetery Gets Stuck In Tree

    Woman Trying To Catch Pokemon In Cemetery Gets Stuck In Tree
    Firefighters in Clarksboro say the woman climbed a tree Tuesday night while playing "Pokemon Go" on her smartphone inside the Eglington Cemetery.

    Woman Trying To Catch Pokemon In Cemetery Gets Stuck In Tree

    East West Thrift store: Give Where You Live

    East West Thrift store:  Give Where You Live

    A new thrift store, recently opened in Surrey, sells everything from Indian and western wear to r...

    East West Thrift store: Give Where You Live

    Watch: A Sanskrit Scholar Sings Honey Singh's 'Dheere Dheere Se' In Sanskrit

    Watch: A Sanskrit Scholar Sings Honey Singh's 'Dheere Dheere Se' In Sanskrit
    Originally sung by Kumar Sanu, the song which appeared in Aashiqui (1990) was later covered by Honey Singh in 2015. Come 2016, Jha has made an unusual cover of the song, which has gone viral.

    Watch: A Sanskrit Scholar Sings Honey Singh's 'Dheere Dheere Se' In Sanskrit

    An Indian Expletive Is The Name Of $23 Cocktail In Singapore

    An Indian Expletive Is The Name Of $23 Cocktail In Singapore
    An interesting cocktail on the menu of Equilibrium, a modern Italian bar and restaurant in Singapore, has an even more interesting name.

    An Indian Expletive Is The Name Of $23 Cocktail In Singapore

    The Murky Role Of Mental Illness In Extremism, Terror

    The Murky Role Of Mental Illness In Extremism, Terror
    After family members of the driver who slammed a truck into a holiday crowd in the French city of Nice said he suffered from depression, questions have been raised again about the links between mental illness, extreme ideology and mass violence.

    The Murky Role Of Mental Illness In Extremism, Terror