Skip to content Skip to navigation

Tribute or Obituary?

Robert Zimmerman, better known as Bob Dylan, has probably never been to Shillong. In his half-a-century old musical career, quite a few birthday parties thrown in his honour worldwide. 35 of such event have been held in the quaint little town of Shillong as the Bob Dylan fest is held in the hill city May 24 every year. It started out as a small private celebration by Lou Majaw - lead singer of the Ace of Spades band and his friends in 1972 and grew into an annual event in Shillong, drawing fans from across the country and the world. On the motive behind the Dylan fest, quintessential Khasi-guitarist, Lou Majaw says, “I’ m not star struck. But from the first time I heard Dylan, his nasal tone, as well as the richness and depth of his verse touched me. It’s not a rock concert though, it’s a celebration. We don’t do it because we are fans, but out of respect and admiration for the man.”

Same can be said about reggae artist Bob Marley whose fans in the hill city have taken it up to themselves to preserve his compositions. The ‘Roots festival’, initiated by local musician Keith Wallang, has been enjoying immense popularity since its inception and its fan following has increased considerably over the years. Both the music festivals have become high-profile affairs and eagerly awaited events in the music calendar of this corner of the planet. These two home grown festivals manages to adequately complement the visiting international groups and keep the music quotient running in Shillong throughout the year.

Of late, the music scene in the capital city of Guwahati has taken a new avatar, which is commanding immense popularity amongst the music crazy people of the region. After rock, metal and hip-hop made inroads into the lives and hearts of the populace, a new fancy in the form of tribute festivals, which has enjoyed immense popularity in Shillong, has caught the imagination of music aficionados.

Shillong is no stranger to tribute festivals as can be noticed by the immense popularity which these two fests enjoy. Shillong and Bob Dylan are almost synonymous. One has to visit Shillong to see that. The immense popularity, which the Dylan fest has enjoyed over the years, has inspired another group of musicians and music enthusiasts in Guwahati to start a similar festival to pay tribute to another legend John Lenon. Dhruva Sarma, popular guitarist and members of Friends, said Lenon was a peace activist and his songs could inspire the younger generation to build a better and peaceful society. “The very idea of celebrating Lenon’s birthday came from the popularity of the Bob Dylan fest in Shillong. Guwahati being the gateway to the region should have a fest like Dylan and there could be no other than Lenon. The great singer who died at the age of only 40 was a role model,” he added.

Another entrepreneur has chosen his café to be the central motif in bid to pay obeisance to his idol, Jimi Hendrix. In November last year, Syed Wazid Ahmed organised a birthday bash for the legendary Jimi Hendrix on his 65th Birthday anniversary in his café which he had appropriately christened, Café Hendrix. The motive behind the celebrations was to unite the northeast through music. To quote Ahmed, “Music is a universal language. It’s a language to win hearts. Music can rule the whole of northeast and we want to use music to unite the people amidst all the strife. The show is meant to unite the people through music and make them relearn the values of love and compassion”.

Seeing the spate of these festivals, one wonders if this new trend of tribute festivals which has swept the region has any other hidden agenda. This question has come to the fore because musicians of the region have always been blamed for their failure to shell out their own compositions. Are tribute festivals, where musicians and bands play only covers, just a clever guise to hide the inability of the musicians to create their own stuff? Now, the twin cities of Guwahati and Shillong are two places which have always been haunted by the frustrations of musicians who in turn chose to drink their way out of reality that has smashed their dreams. Is this new trend just a form of diversion to the important question of originality which has become pretty loud at the moment?

The present musical scene which is but, a mere continuum of the past, where our musicians are more inclined to play covers instead of shelling out their own stuff. After all, originality is the moot word of all musical endeavours which want to show the listeners the way to the realm of dreams. Are these festivals really a mark of tribute to musical icons or are they obituaries marking the death of originality amongst the musicians? It is imperative that the musicians and music lovers find the answer to this very important question before they let the music play on.

Add new comment

Random Stories

Assamese band wins award

19 Mar 2017 - 1:14pm | Upasana Medhi
Rain in Sahara, a band formed in Assam, wins the Gold Medal at 'Indian Music Video Awards-2017' for their music video Black Water. The award function was held in Guwahati on March 18, 2017. The music...

NEC Sectoral Summit Begins in Delhi

21 Aug 2007 - 4:00am | pbaruah
New Delhi : The North Eastern Council begins its 8th Sectoral Summit here at the Vigyan Bhawan on Monday morning to focus on issues pertaining to education, sports and art...

Abductors held in Kalaigaon

21 Mar 2017 - 9:25pm | AT Staff Reporter
In a very drama like action Udalguri police successfully apprehended two abductors and rescued two persons who had been abducted yesterday within twenty four hours.According to information,one Arab...

Traditional hunting poses serious threat to ecology in Udalguri district

6 Mar 2012 - 11:21pm | Jayanta Kumar Das
Traditional hunting of small wild animals,birds,rodents,amphibians has posed a serious threat to ecology of the state. Such traditional hunting by groups of villagers belonging to a few community...

Other Contents by Author

Last year around this very time, a new rock festival started off in Silchar. It was being organized by NIT and was labelled “Thundermarch”. At that time, I was kind of apprehensive about the whole event and somehow could not link Silchar with rock. However, much to my delight and to the benefit of the rock scene in this corner of the country, I was proved wrong. Thundermarch 2009 truly struck Silchar in an unimaginable way and immediately ensured that the festival gets a place into the Northeast Indian rock calendar. More than 20 bands from different corners of the region had competed with each other for the top prize. And to add further sheen to the entire festival were...
Mile Sur Mera Tumhara, the iconic anthem written by Piyush Pandey with which thousands of Indians of a particular generation grew up, had recently been re-shot in a new avatar. The new version was released in Mumbai on Republic Day earlier this week. The popularity of the original version of this anthem cannot be gauged in words as it was highly successful in generating patriotic fervor among the masses. The original video featured some of the most popular Indians of that era, like Amitabh Bacchan, Mithun Chakraborty, Jitendra, dancer Mallika Sarabhai, cartoonist Mario Miranda, filmmaker Mrinal Sen, Sunil Gangopadhyay, author Annadashankar Ray, singers Bhimsen Joshi, M Balamuralikrishna,...
Kalpa, a Society for Promotion of Art, Literature, Culture and Social Harmony, founded a year ago is hosting the ‘Pragjyoti Dance Festival: A View of Indian Dance’ by young proponents for the second time on January 8, 9 and 19, 2010 in Rabindra Bhawan, Guwahahti. It may be remembered that the first Pragjyoti National Dance Festival, held in February 2009, covering almost all the major Indian classical dance traditions including Sattriya Dance created a susceptible impact among the dancephiles and art connoisseurs of the country. This year’s festival, which is being supported by the Sangeet Natak Akademi, the National Academy for Music, Dance and Drama, will be...
Though music has remained an unerring passion of mine right from a very early age, the harmonica had always been an alien instrument for me, and it was only recently that I began to appreciate the immense musical possibilities associated with the harmonica. Thanks to my friend Abe from Suzuki who introduced me to its limitless possibilities, and who helped arrange a music concert for harmonica virtuoso Jia-Yi He in our city earlier this year, I have been encountering quite a few harmonica players and enthusiasts in our region. Sometime back, I came across another Indian who has been creating waves with the harmonica in the global circuit. His recently released album, Tip of the Top,...
In recent times, blogging has touched the lives of every individual one way or the other. During the last general elections, we saw BJP’s prime ministerial candidate LK Advani using this dynamic medium to spread the principle of his party to all the netizens of the country, and even those living abroad. The US presidential election also saw wide use of this medium by the political parties and candidates to propagate their respective issues. The north-eastern part of the country has also not remained untouched by this ever-growing phenomenon in the virtual world. Today, we can see various blogs on various topics emerging from a section of educated net enthusiasts, most of whom are...
Around 5,000 musicians and music lovers from Guwahati, Karbi Anglong, NC Hills and Dimapur lighting candles in remembrance of the October 30, 2008 serial Assam blasts victims in the 1st Karbi Anglong Beats Contest, organized by Eastern Beats Music Society as part of the 7th Rongthe’ang Traditional Dance and Music Fest, in Diphu on Thursday. The 1st Karbi Anglong Beats Contest was organized by Eastern Beats Music Society – the first comprehensive music society of the region. Photo by Morningkeey Phangcho
Over the last few years, the live music scene in Northeast India has been picking up momentum, making the region one of the most vibrant music destinations of the country. Performance of international artistes and rock bands in cities like Shillong and Dimapur have further helped bring international focus to the region. Though the region is being promoted as a music capital, a section of musicians of the city are unhappy with the sorry state of affairs of the local music scene. They feel that just a few international artists cannot make a region a music capital and the local music scene needs to develop for hat. Moa Subong, frontman of Grammy-nominated experimental rock group Abiogenesis,...
India’s Northeast can rightfully be considered an uncrowned jewel, what with its remarkable beauty and splendour. The topographical, geographical, cultural and other factors which distinguish the region from other parts of the country may indeed be attributed to the diverse group of people inhabiting the region and their rich and varied customs, which influence the lifestyle and way of life of the people. Indeed, the Northeast is literally an unexplored paradise; a region bestowed with such pristine beauty and splendour that is bound to drive a visitor in a state of perpetual amazement. Speaking of the Northeast and its distinctive features, one facet of life of the people here,...
A young Asomiya girl recently made the entire State proud by making a mark in a prestigious national- level model hunt. Yes, I am talking about Shyashree Saikia of Jorhat who proved the better of models from all over the country to clinch the runners-up trophy in the Dabur Gulabari Sananda Tilottama Beauty Contest 2009. Besides anything else, I appreciate this young girl’s determination to pursue her passion despite all odds and I guess this is the very quality which has taken her this far. Confidence is the first thing that would strike you when you talk to her and I guess the youth of the region would do good by taking a leaf from her book. I recently called up Shyashree to talk...
Almost five decades back, virtuoso saxophonist Albert Ayler had proclaimed: “Music is the healing force in the universe”. Ayler was right on mark when he said the above words for his proclaimed words are relevant even today, especially in our very own strife-torn Northeast India, where mankind is in sure need of quite a bit of healing.More than just a healing force, music is a tool which can be used for greater understanding between different cultures around the world. As modernisation and technology makes inroads into each and every aspect of our lives and the entire world becomes one small little village, music is the very medium which can help bind people and their hearts...