Category Archives: politics

Kickbackistan – kicking out corruption the TAAQ way

Kickbackistan is Thermal And A Quarter’s response to the corruption surrounding the Commonwealth Games 2010. Continue reading

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Don’t believe everything Tehelka says about Indian rock!

My friends at Thermal And A Quarter and I read Inder Sidhu’s outcry against “the media’s hysterical coverage of Indian rock bands” (and before that, in 2008, Deepanjana Pal’s diatribe against Indian rock) in Tehelka with familiar feelings of resigned amusement and piquant regret. While Sidhu makes some pleasant noises and points available fingers at the usual suspects, he disappoints us by stating the obvious and therefore fails to offer us any fresh insight into what actually ails the rock scene. What ails the media we already know.

Sidhu writes that the “vocabulary and context for rock criticism does not exist in India.” When was the last time you met an editor who condescended to carry a major story about any Westernised urban counterculture in India? When was the last time any self-respecting commentator (such as you, we hope) turned away from the clippings morgue and did some legwork to find out what’s really happening in India’s underground music scene?

For instance, how do Indian bands approach songwriting, where do they learn to play their instruments, where do they rehearse? How do they finance gear, studio time and production efforts? What level of initiative does it take for a band to bag concert dates at Hard Rock Cafe or Blue Frog, or plan a five-city tour? Or to cut an album and market it independently?

These realities offer story ideas for any journalist with a serious interest in writing about Indian rock. Perhaps Sidhu might want to consider exploring these areas instead of expending two thousand words on a subject he believes is not worth writing about. That’s laughable. Of course, we are aware these stories can’t be written within a week’s deadline but has any journalist cared to investigate the possibilities, or any editor dared to commission them? Continue reading

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One Small Love – drawing the line

The ‘One Small Love – Bangalore for Mangalore’ concert on February 14, a red-letter day made infamous by Hallmark cards and various killjoy extremist groups, will bring together musicians Konarak Reddy, Ravi Kulur, Alwyn Fernandes, Gerard Machado, Karan Joseph, Gaurav Vaz and Swarathma along with Thermal And A Quarter. Continue reading

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Protest and the Strange Fruit of Mistaken Identity

I happened to be streaming Nina Simone’s haunting rendition of Strange Fruit when the news video of the policeman’s killing, which had been buffering, came alive. Both audio tracks played side by side and I was struck by the eerie similarity of their themes — it had a sort of roughhewn, impromptu resemblance to Simon & Garfunkel’s Silent Night-7 O’clock News.

The age of original heartfelt protest songs in jazz, pop or rock has passed unlamented ever since we started counting Madonna, MJ, Eminem, the Black-Eyed Peas and Amy Winehouse among protest singers. Insidiously, Protest has become a marketing label, a genre if you like — which adds up to a nice new varnished shelf in a large music store somewhere before Punk and after Gospel. Most artists have realized that they have little to protest about but their own inconspicuousness. And their acts of protest are in truth about having a go at the fifteen lucre-encrusted minutes of fame that their voices, if sufficiently loud, would bring them. Continue reading

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26/11 – What about our homegrown terrorists?

Seriously, don’t we have to redefine terrorism before we figure out who is a terrorist? Continue reading

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Is Varun Gandhi the BJP's biotech boy?

Despite the entire drama that has played out around Varun Gandhi, the BJP is sure to try and cash in on their new biotech boy’s shenanigans. For Gandhi family baiters like Shri Narendra Modi, young Mr. Gandhi is a boon like no other. To have an ostracised member of the great lineage of the Nehrus and the Gandhis in the Lotus camp must be in some sense satisfying. But looking at young Varun shooting his mouth off like that, one only wishes that his late father had, true to his sloganeering during the Emergency, turned the scalpel upon his own loins. Continue reading

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Now, even burqas are against Indian culture?!

Not to be outdone by the rave publicity that the Sri Rama Sene is hogging, the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), the student wing of the BJP, has imposed a ban on women wearing burqas at a college in rural Karnataka.

Now, what are we to make of this? Western dresses are sacrilegious. Burqas offend Indian culture. Perhaps the sari, a garment that exposes ample midriff, ought to be made the official garment for all college-going women. Continue reading

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Yes, Prime Ministerial candidate?

On the subject of the attacks on women in Bangalore, Shri Advani is laconic. On his blog, he says just this much: “I have read in newspapers reports about some hoodlums attacking girls in Continue reading

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It's not over yet, Shri Yeddyurappa

With every incident of so-called Islamic terrorism, we point the finger randomly at LeT, or HuJi or SIMI or whatever. Our speculation has built the brands of these outfits, whoever they are. In much the same way, the last month or so has been a product launch for the Sri Rama Sene. And if the BJP assumes power again the next time round, whose back will it ride on? Note that it will have plenty of right-wing options to choose from. That we have a fascist government in Karnataka is no longer just conjecture. It’s the history that we are writing with our apathy. Continue reading

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Swat analysis: A cool $6 mn for the Taliban?

For Rs. 280 million (approximately $6 mn), the government of Pakistan has brokered an uneasy peace with the Taliban. The cash, it seems, came from Mr. Ten Percent’s private fund. Big price for an unreliable peace? Continue reading

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