Abhijit
Pohankar - best-known for his version of Piya bawari
- is moving beyond classical realms. Perceived as
a new-generation artiste who turned classical music cool,
the keyboard player's music is an eclectic mix of
traditional strains with new urban sounds, delivered with
contemporary, cutting-edge panache.
'My music is new-age Indian and heard by youngsters
who don't really listen to strictly classical music,'
feels Abhijit, who recently received the Youth Icon award
from the Rotary International District 3290.
'Raags have a quality akin to trance that appeals
to the youth. They also have an element of rock music.
Raag Darbari, for example, has that rock element. Todi
has trance elements. It all depends on the raag and the
bandish,' says Abhijit.
Dad Pandit Ajay Pohankar was less than ecstatic about
the direction his son
was taking. 'My father did not
like my ideas, but when he heard the first album, he was
happy. Later on, I used his voice in my compositions,'
smiles Abhijit.
As for remixes, Abhijit says he isn't against them.
'But there's a difference between the kind of
remix that is done in India and abroad. A remix is about
adding your own flavour to the song. I hate it however,
when Madan Mohan gets remixed,' admits Abhijit.
While his sole Bollywood outing was to share credits with
tabla whiz/Asian Underground co-founder Talvin Singh for
Boom, Abhijit says Sanjay Leela Bhansali is one director
he would like to work with. And among Bengali film-makers?
'I'd love to compose a score for Aparna Sen,'
he offers.
Meanwhile, a concert with his father on vocals, Yanni
on keyboards and the inimitable Slash from Guns 'N'
Roses on guitars is what he's dreaming of. We're
waiting
Saionee Chakraborty