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3/16/2019 Ground Zero | How Chennai's Casteless Collective uses music to talk about social and political issues

es music to talk about social and political issues - The Hindu

GROUND ZERO | CHENNAI

A personal and political act: on Chennai’s Casteless Collective

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Jayant Sriram
MARC H 16, 20 19 0 0 :15 IST
U PDATED: MARC H 16, 20 19 14:19 IST

The emergence of Chennai’s Casteless Collective shows a growing interest in engaging with art that talks about
social and political issues. Jayant Sriram reports on the musical traditions it draws from and the possibilities that lie
ahead

O n a June evening in Chennai last year, a young man, slightly built and bespectacled, took to the stage at the Madras Medai
festival, an event organised to promote independent music artists. He wore jeans and a long white t-shirt that read “They call me
ARIVU.” He began performing a rap number that grabbed immediate attention with its first line: “What? Are you calling me an
anti-Indian?”

“Close your eyes and hear my story,” he exhorted before questioning the idea of national pride.

Take your false pride and throw it far away my fellow Tamilians/ Are we all equal?/ Does everybody have land?/ Is this your
tradition?/ We are fighting for Cauvery/ While we ignore our slums.
And then in another passage:

Where is your Aadhaar card?/ Without that, do you even exist?/ The government gives us free rice/ Adulterated with stones/ Our
children attend government schools that are next to alcohol shops their fathers visit/ I want only your tax,/ I don’t want your
tears,/ The entire nation comes at a price. / What? Are you calling me an anti-Indian?
Cut to March 2019 to an event at Chennai’s Music Academy, considered one of the high temples of Carnatic music. One of its
auditoriums on this occasion is being used for a barrier-breaking event, the first ticketed performance of Oppari music, a sort of
funeral dirge sung in parts of Tamil Nadu that is associated with backward castes. This is a style of music that is widely shunned
because many believe that it carries the stigma of death. One of the performers for the evening is a man dressed in a crisp blue
shirt and a white veshti. He calls himself Serikuyil Set, or the nightingale of the ghettos. He is the last of the performers, and while
those who have preceded him have sung the traditional lament, he announces that he is going to sing a lament for the nation. In
the Oppari style, with the rhythmic beating of the parai (a circular percussion instrument made of animal skin) following every

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verse, he sings of poverty and discrimination, demonetisation and clean India. The music has broken out of a caste identity. It is
free.

Microcosm of a movement
The Neelam Cultural Centre is an organisation headed by film director Pa. Ranjith. It organised both the Madras Medai festival
and the Oppari concert at the Music Academy. In its office sits Arivarasu Kalainesan, or Arivu, 24, the writer of ‘Anti-Indian’, who
says Seri kuyil Shettu was one of his childhood inspirations. “I was never allowed to watch TV or movies growing up in
Arakkonam (about two hours west of Chennai) so I used to watch performances like his. I would go early so I could sit in the front
row,” he says.

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The similarities here form the microcosm of a powerful cultural moment where there is an appeal for an authentic, organic style
of storytelling through rap, reflected in the success of a Hindi film Gully Boy, based on the music of Mumbai rappers Naezy and
Divine. Allied to this in Tamil Nadu is a movement mobilising art to speak about politics. This is led by the films of Pa. Ranjith and
the musical venture that he co-founded a year ago, the Casteless Collective. Incidentally, Arivu is one of the principal lyricists for
the Collective. Until recently Arivu did not know that the poetry he wrote could lend itself to rap. That realisation came only after
he joined the Casteless Collective and started working with his producer and co-writer, ofRO.

He learned about music, he says, from the temple near his home, which used to blare music from 4 a.m.; from Oppari; and from
Gaana, a folk music style associated with Dalits from the slums of north Chennai, while travelling on the train from Arakkonam to

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Chennai. “The panels of the trains on the inside were made of wood, and that was enough for creating the basic percussion beat for
Gaana songs,” he explains. “These were songs passed down over the years by men and women who travelled to Chennai every day.
It was a kind of freestyle music that they would sing on the trains after a long day’s work, expressing the hardship faced by the
marginalised communities.”

On the table in front of him, Arivu instinctively taps out a basic beat, and sings one of the many numbers he has an almost
encyclopaedic knowledge of:

I never had the chance to go to school,/ When the neighbour’s kid was going to school I was taking care of my sister,/ When you
were counting numbers,/ I was busy counting matches.
“It was probably a reference to working in a matchstick or firecracker factory,” he explains.
The Casteless Collective

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0:00 / 2:02

Art that derives from traditional folk forms and is mobilised to start a conversation about major social and political issues is the
central premise of the Casteless Collective. The Collective is a band comprising primarily of Gaana singers from north Chennai;
instrumentalists who play the guitar, drums, and percussion instruments such as the tavil and parai that are played at funerals;
and rappers, courtesy Arivu and the Dharavi-based Dopeadelicz.

Since its first concert a little over a year ago, the group has made waves for its politically charged music. Their debut album
‘Magizhchi’ features songs such as ‘Jai Bhim Anthem’, which talks about B.R. Ambedkar’s life. Other songs dwell on the beef ban
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and manual scavenging. There is politics both in the showcasing of the traditional forms of Dalit music and in their deployment
to speak of issues concerning caste and Dalit identity. In that sense, the Casteless Collective can best be understood as a controlled
experiment, a trigger for a larger conversation about politics, music and the very politics of music.

“Gaana music originated with travellers who had come to the slums of north Chennai. It is basically a music of liberation for
labourers,” explains music director Tenma, whose Madras Records collaborated with Pa. Ranjith and the Neelam Cultural Centre
to find the various artists and form the cultural centre. Having grown up in north Chennai himself, Tenma says that there is a
variant of Gaana that is sung at funerals, a form that speaks about ideology and the struggle of the working classes and, from the
1980s onwards, a form that is a protest, a medium of conveying Ambedkarite ideology. Mobilising Gaana to speak of politics is
intrinsic to its spirit, he points out, and the Collective utilises the traditional beats of the medium to revive old songs as well as
write new material.

Since the ’90s, Gaana has been used sporadically in Tamil film music. But in most cases, it was used as a novelty device, says
Tenma. “With a few exceptions, the stories were removed and the lines were sanitised.” The Casteless Collective, then, is the first
attempt at scale to give it space as a valid medium. “The message is that we are alive and we are winning. This is no longer a music
form that has to be associated with slavery or with the marginalised,” Tenma says.

The addition of a rap or hip hop element was not something they initially planned. “When we were auditioning singers for the
Casteless Collective, I wasn’t really expecting a lot of artists who we eventually came to work with. The initial plan was to have a
band for Gaana singers,” he explains. Yet several young listeners now think of the Casteless Collective as a rap outfit and it’s no
coincidence that the weeks following the release of Gully Boy saw numerous articles branding the Collective as its southern
counterpart. Tenma says that may be more indicative of an audience instinct to identify the band with the form of music that is
more popular or considered cooler.
 
A LS O REA D
Yet, it’s worth questioning if the association with rap can help the Casteless Collective be a catalyst to bring
to the fore and carry forward the wealth of cultural material and traditions of storytelling that live on in
musical forms such as Gaana.

Our music is
Madurai-based Dalit scholar Stalin Rajangam sees a significant counter-politics in the very fact of Gaana —
about raw and musical instruments like the parai — finding a significant stage. “In Tamil Nadu, people will accept
primal instinct:
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The Casteless classical Carnatic music,” he explains. “When they want to look beyond that to folk music, they usually
Collective
celebrate forms of music from Tamil Nadu’s agrarian communities. These are typically from places such as
Tirunelveli, or music that valorises the macho culture of regions such as Madurai. Gaana, which is about the life and hardships of
people who live in urban slums, has not even been given the status of folk art.”

Gaana music, however, has a story to tell about the lives and culture of a significant section of Tamil people who have barely been
recognised. “If you go to north Chennai now, you will see kids playing cricket, football and carrom. You will find rock, jazz and
other forms of music, different dialects and ways of speaking, and a community that has a lot of intermingling,” Rajangam says.
They defy the feudal way of looking at Tamil society, which is still the normative perspective. This perspective is dominated by
caste relations and may have contributed, Rajangam says, to a fear and mistrust of these communities. For Rajangam, then, there
are stories to be told about this community and their way of life. “The Casteless Collective was specifically set up to communicate
a political message but it is just a start. The form can change. What matters ultimately is that the music should have appeal.”

Commercial considerations
It is perhaps too soon to have a conversation about the commercial possibilities of the Casteless Collective’s brand of music, but
it’s worth noting just how different their trajectory has been from other hip hop artistes in India that have found success. To pick a
small sample size, let’s take Naezy and Divine from Gully Boy, and the two prominent hip hop artistes featured in Ranjith’s hit
film Kaala — the Dopeadelicz, and Yogi B, a Malaysian-Indian artist widely regarded as the founder of Tamil hip hop. For all of
them, their interest in hip hop originated in their curiosity about, and knowledge of, the Western hip hop tradition and artists. It is
this learning which they then sought to apply to their own context. A profile of Naezy and Divine, published two years ago in the
Mumbai edition of The Hindu, even notes that they had actually started out singing in English. It was only later that they realised
that their message would come across stronger if expressed in their own language.
Yogi B, a star in Malaysia, makes frequent appearances in Tamil film songs and recently contributed the vocals to the song
‘Katravai Patravai’ in Kaala. The song is intensely political (‘Katravai Patravai’ means ‘Educate, Ignite’, a motto of Ambedkarite
politics), but interestingly, Yogi B says he had very little understanding of caste politics when he did the song.

“When I started doing hip hop in Malaysia, I felt no necessity to address caste discrimination, as it is not a big issue in Malaysia,” he
explains. “But I think the kind of music that the Casteless Collective and artists like Arivu are writing now is extremely powerful. I
was taken aback by the in-your-face power of their lyrics.”
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There is excitement in Yogi B’s voice when he discusses the potential of fusing hip hop and Gaana. He sees the movement started
by the Casteless Collective as true to what he calls the soul of hip hop, a music of upliftment. Political music needs good back up,
Yogi B says, and he acknowledges that at this particular moment, with an influential figure like Pa. Ranjith involved, it’s likely to
draw the spotlight.

Yet, there is a pause as he considers how far it could go. It may not be the intention of Pa. Ranjith or Tenma right now to consider
the commercial pull of the Collective’s music, but in the veteran Yogi B, you can see exactly those considerations being weighed
out.

Keeping it real
It is true that the Collective’s music follows the hip hop edict of ‘keeping it real’, which means singing about their own truth, and
their own life experiences, as a way of identifying the personal with the political. For Yogi B, this approach is, of course, essential
for creating a sound that pulls audiences in. But he adds a caveat: “If the music is overtly political, it will burn out after a while
because the message first has to be personal, and it has to be uplifting. Once you have built an audience, you can get into
addressing purely political issues.”

Yogi B is thrilled by the buzz that the Casteless Collective has generated but is startled by the idea of rap being composed without
an understanding of the Western hip hop culture. “I was amazed to hear that Arivu hadn’t listened to any hip hop when he was
writing his songs. He told me he had picked up the intonation and his manner of delivering the lines by trying to imitate a
Christian pastor he had heard when he was young!”
On the other hand, an example of a band that follows the more conventional hip hop idiom is a new group that Yogi B is
mentoring, named Madurai Souljours. Syan, the group’s lead singer, says the group was keen to adapt the hip hop template and
give their own language a fresh kind of music. “We basically sing about the issues that affect us in our daily lives — the
neighbourhoods we come from, our journey to be recognised as musicians,” he says.
As Yogi B reiterates, often groups that taste commercial success with a more organic sound subsequently pick up themes that are
overtly political. For instance, the Mumbai hip hop collective Swadesi, known for singing about urban gullies and ghettos, has
gone on to take up the cause of saving the local Adivasi population from being displaced by a controversial development project

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in Aarey Colony. Meanwhile, Dopeadelicz, whose music used to focus on issues such as marijuana legalisation and police troubles
in the slums, is now an active part of the Casteless Collective, and has begun to incorporate elements of Gaana into their music.

A new fusion
Arivu wrote his first song when he was in Class 10 for a singing competition in his school. It was inspired by Gaana and was about
the beauty he saw in the world around him. “I sang about how my school was beautiful, how the girls were beautiful, how the
teachers were beautiful. I think some of the lyrics didn’t go down well, and the school cancelled the singing competition after
that,” he says, laughing. “I’m pretty sure if I had sung that same song in Carnatic verse, it would have evoked a very different
response.”

The episode seemed to have had a carry-on effect on Arivu. He says he struggled for a long time to write material that was
personal. It’s a conversation that he often has with ofRO. “He’s very good at writing about issues like manual scavenging, but I keep
telling him that he needs to write more about his life and his story,” ofRO says.

Their independent album is yet to be released. Aside from ‘Anti-Indian’ that has already made waves, there are tracks like
Snowlin, about 17-year-old J. Snowlin, who was gunned down by the police in Thoothukudi last year during the anti-Sterlite
plant protest. The song, notably more conversational and less urgent in its delivery, is like a combination of Oppari and gospel.
Other tracks are more personal — one talks of Arivu’s personal journey to joining the Casteless Collective and finding a place for
his music. Still another talk about what he calls “middle class life”.
It would be interesting to see to what extent this album moves the Casteless Collective’s cultural project forward, one year after it
was formed. If it pulls off a potent fusion of various storytelling traditions that Arivu seems to channel, with the popular appeal of
hip hop, it could mark a start.

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