https://cafedissensus.com/2020/03/21/popular-music-subculture-and-the-northeast-youth/
Café Dissensus on March 21, 2020
Café Dissensus on March 21, 2020
“Goin’ where the wind blows”
John Ruskin once said, “Tell me what you like, and
I’ll tell you what you are”. Often, this truth is also expressed
about the taste of other things in life, like fashion or music.
Sometimes, somehow, there is also a regional or generational
similarity in the choices made. And the youth from the Northeast of
India share a craze for western flavoured popular music, particularly
of the Rock and alternative genre. The emergence of Hornbill Fest,
NH7 Weekender Shillong, Ziro Fest, etc. is a manifestation of the
popularity of this subculture in the region. This is an everyday
reality that is expressed by the youth wherever they find themselves
in. Duncan McDuie-Ra in his book Northeast Migrants in Delhi:
Race, Refuge and Retail (2012) narrates how the Northeasterners
found new hubs even in metro cities like Delhi where distinct
flavours of food, fashion and music find expression.
Back in the 1990s when I was in Shillong, there was
a craze for popular music, mostly of the rock music. Collections of
‘Yearbook’ – compilation of the best songs of the year – and
RSJ (Rock Street Journal) were sought after hobbies of the youth. The
90s was also the heydays of ‘Rock’ music in India. Thanks to the
popularization of foreign satellite televisions those days,
especially MTV, the culture had far reaching effect. The era saw the
launch of the popular RSJ and GIR (Great Indian Rock) concerts which
are still affecting the youth today as almost strongly as when they
were newly launched. And Shillong was a rock music capital of the
country, not far behind other metros like Mumbai and Bangalore in
hosting international bands. The region with Shillong as the locus of
music, particularly western, attracted international popular bands
like Smokie, Bryan Adams, Air Supply, Firehouse, MLTR, and the
Christian rock band Petra, to name a few, entertained the fans. Music
is certainly a great unifier!
Most people from other parts of India often ask me
how it is that most young people from Northeast know how to play at
least one musical instrument, especially guitar, apart from singing
mellifluously. I don’t really have an answer for that but music is
pretty much ingrained in the culture. Perhaps, musics flow in our
veins! Reuben Mashangvah, the well-known Naga folk-guru once
interestingly put it this way:
Since we were
kids, we get hooked to the sound of guitar. We used to work in jhum
fields and earn money to buy guitars that came from Burma. But then
no one could play the guitar. There was no one to teach us. What we
would do was we listened to the radio and discovered the keys and
chords for ourselves (David Buhril, “North East India: India’s
Rock Hub” in North East Sun, December 15, 2006, p. 21).
Perhaps, that explains a bit! What Reuben said is
very much a shared experience of the growing up youth of the region.
And undeniably, there is the influence of the western style of music
and technology. Writing for RSJ while talking about the music scene
in the region, Randeep Kaur says, “The North Eastern region of
India is undoubtedly the home to some of the most incredibly talented
musicians – it houses some of the best of metal, electronic, folk,
fusion, pop and jazz musicians in the country” (“Continuity &
Community”, RSJ, March 17, 2018).
I remember, growing up in the countryside and
listening to the favorite ‘western music’ played on different
radio stations, AIR Shillong, AIR Kohima, and AIR Imphal, as
something to look forward to during the day. Though cassettes were
available, it wasn’t quite affordable for us to buy all of them in
the market. Picking up a nice collection of it was all we could do at
a time. And radio could provide us the desired variety. And what’s
more, it used to be aired when it suited us best, time-wise. The lazy
afternoon normally turned into a lively one the moment the clock
struck the time for western music. We could really resonate with the
Carpenters when they sang, “When I as young I listen to the radio/
Waiting for my favorite song” (“Yesterday Once More”). It was
not just the listening but like Reuben Mashangvah we would try out
best to strum our treasured guitars like the ones we’d heard in the
radio and cassettes. Not everyone possessed guitars, but if one in
the friend circle got it, it was like everyone’s property. We would
strum the chords and play it “till our fingers bleed” to rhyme
with Bryan Adams’ “best days of my life” (“Summer of ‘69”).
“Life in the Fast Lane”
The advancement of technology and the enlarging
communication systems have certainly contributed a lot to the
development of a ‘global market’. The world we live in is
transforming at a very quick pace: it’s ‘life in the fast lane’.
And the Northeast is not left far behind in the ‘rat race’. The
‘images’ that get circulated in the internet have far-widening
effect on the youth. The long hair, tattoos, body piercing, etc. have
rapidly transformed the ‘lifestyle’ of the youth. The ‘easy
going’ nature of the young people has paved the way for the
modernized western lifestyle to seep into the ‘open’ culture of
the tribes of Northeast.
On hindsight, however, globalization as a policy to
permeate the economies of the rest of the world is largely American
in nature, given the fact that the western culture is dominated by
American values. Being home to “most of the products that dominates
daily life around our globe”, America has benefited from its
‘soft power’ as much as it has been strengthened through her
‘hard power’ – military might (Shashi Tharoor, “Can India be
a World Leader?” in Reference Yearbook 2005, p. 98). This
‘soft power’ is even more powerful than the ‘hard power’. It
does not cause casualties like the ‘hard power’ but seeps into
the lives of people and slowly dominates their everyday life. And, of
course, this is very relevant in today’s world. America has learned
it well that it doesn’t need to use its ‘hard power’ to
dominate the world; its ‘soft power’ works in its favor. There
was a time when the idea of a nation was limited to territorial
terms. In today’s global network society when every corner of the
world is “interconnected by nodes”, the peripheries are
deterritorialized (Manuel Castells, The Rise of the Network
Society, 2000, p. 501).
And, of course, one cannot also ignore the
commercial or the money aspect of it: “Cultural forms like popular
music always relate to money and power” (Johan Fonnas, “Moving
Rock: Youth and Pop in late Modernity” in Popular Music
Vol. 9 No. 3, October, 1990, p. 292). The emergence of pop/icon and
the craze after rock bands can be looked upon as ‘symbols’ that
attract the attention of people. A popular music genre is always
sought after. And from generation to generation the popularity of
music changes. From the jazz to rock ‘n’ roll to rock to reggae
to pop to rap to hip-hop to technologically-influenced music of dance
remixes and trance genre changes too with the strategy of the market.
This is more so since the late 1990s up till now and these are mainly
manipulated according to the taste of the consumer. And then, there
is the ‘selling’ factor of the product. The fact that rock music
sells in the Northeast is already a reason for the international
mediators or sponsors to eye that region. And this has been further
quickened by the emergence of transnational media and network
systems.
‘Enter the Fusion Music’: Resurgence of
tradition?
For a long time now, however, music as a career has
never been encouraged by the older generation/parents for moral as
well as economic reasons. The moral reason is closely tied to the
kind of images that the popular icons have displayed – rebellion,
sex, drugs, etc. – thereby painting a picture in the minds of the
parents that ‘rock’ culture is destructive and hence to be
discarded. But the second reason, that is, economic viability, has
bigger implications. The largely agrarian society has not quite seen
music as a sustainable career option, let alone the high cost of
investment that is usually required. But lately, these hurdles have
been crossed as many youths from the region have made successful
music careers, both locally as well as internationally. It is not a
surprise that most schools in the Delhi NCR have people from the
Northeast as music teachers/instructors, particularly the western
music.
Even in the states of the region, of late, there has
been a big push to promote music as an industry. An example can be
taken of the Nagaland state government’s initiative to launch the
Special Task Force for Music (STFM) in 2005 to promote the music
industry. Since then there has been a visible and steady growth of
the industry in the state. But this also brings to fore the need for
a political will backed by a well-planned commercial strategy to
enable a conducive growth of music in the region. The fact that the
now famous Hornbill Festival continues to draw publicity and host
grand music fest is because it is a state-sponsored annual event
under STEM.
On the same note, there is also a kind of resurgence
among the Nagas to pick up their long-ignored musical tradition. With
a legacy of a vibrant oral tradition where music has a quintessential
role to play, the Naga musicians have experimented and reinvented
their own musical root. In course of time, there is development of a
fusion music genre. By and large, this genre has mystified music
lovers. The success of Tetseo Sisters, Abiogenesis, The Purple
Fusion, just to name a few, has strengthened this newfound interest.
Perhaps, this is also a conscious choice for many music lovers
because the fusion music has greater affinity with the folk. This new
indigenous identity injected to music shows some promising future in
the social relevance of musical art. There is now a rise in the youth
music bands that blend their acquired knowledge of the western music
and the freshly discovered music of their own and make a different
genre of music that is yet to be discovered by the world. We see this
slowly penetrating the church music too. For the Nagas, being largely
Christian, the church holds an important place in shaping the mindset
of the people. There is a clear visible rise of interest in
ethnomusicology and it incorporates the church music sphere too. And
for a good reason, the fusion music is the one which is likely to
sustain.
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