For a whole year, Soumik Datta was haunted by terrible nightmares. There was no paranormal phantom spectre — but the rapid destruction of our environment that was keeping him awake. The facts are enough to horrify anyone; between July 2018 and July 2019, more than 9,000 sq km of the Amazon rainforest were lost to deforestation, according to Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE). This has been the highest since 2008. “Trees and forests are the lungs of this planet,” says the 35-year old London-based musician.
His medium of dissenting the climate crisis came about the only way he knows how: with a protest EP titled Jangal (Urdu for jungle that also translates to wasteland).
Drawing from natureADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The five-track album that released last week is raw, angry and beseeching all at once, bringing together a heady swirl of world instruments, genres and sonic landscapes.
In ‘Wildfire’, Datta’s frenetic strumming is fuelled by angst at what human greed and ignorance has caused. “There’s definitely screaming and violence in there, very much to do with [forest] fires and tractors chopping down trees. We don’t think of trees becoming a rare species [like animals] but this is what we are facing,” he says. With the title track, Datta experiments with
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Chosen by the sarod
When Datta moved to the UK at the age of 11, he accidentally chanced on his grandmother’s sarod in storage. Disoriented by feeling displaced, he felt a kinship with the instrument, a strange sentiment since he’d never connected with Indian classical music.
“The sarod was such a force. In many ways, it chose me and I feel sabotaged … but in a good way. I enjoy the peace that I find when the tanpura goes off and someone just hits the ‘saa’ in perfect tune,” he says. “I also relish when an overdriven guitar screams through the amps and the crowd grows wild. I won’t be able to live without one or the other.” It is no wonder then Datta’s list of collaborators includes Queen Bey and her husband along with names like Talvin Singh, the London Philharmonic Orchestra and Joss Stone.
Jangal is available on Apple Music, Spotify and other music streaming platforms