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Out Of Tune: Indie Musicians Seek Protection From Heckling And Abuse At Gigs

Performers바카라 safety can only be ensured through street cred and holding organisers accountable.

Ever since Bhopal-based musician Samar Mehdi gave a detailed account of how he was heckled, catcalled and threatened with empty beer bottles being waved in his direction by a section of rowdy, drunk men at a posh pub in Delhi, several musicians have not only issued statements in support of Mehdi, but also spoke up about similar situations when they, too, have faced abuse and insult while performing at venues such as a pub or a restaurant.

From being threatened with guns, knives and liquor bottles to being roundly booed just because they dished out genres of music other than the tinny abominations of mainstream pop바카라Indian artistes are used to being the object of these unlovely demonstrations from audiences.  

바카라I remember this was during my Cyanide days바카라we were in a pub in Calcutta, and towards the last song, some loutish men actually took out knives and said that if I stopped playing they바카라d stab me!바카라 recalls Rohan Solomon, a Delhi-based popular Indie singer- songwriter and music producer.  

Solomon is hardly the only one to have had an experience like this. Popular singer-rapper Raftaar recalls being threatened by guns and knives too during the early phases of his career. 바카라Yes, it has happened at my shows as well. I have had had guns being fired, and bottles being thrown at the stage for a variety of reasons,바카라 he attests.  

A majority of the artistes feel that these happen primarily because of their wide acceptability over decades, with such heckling even being considered a 바카라rite of passage바카라 for an artiste to endure to eventually have a successful career in music바카라a hazing ritual for acceptability in a man바카라s world.

바카라It has been normalised. I mean, people just don바카라t get that difference between a live artiste and someone who is just an in-h­­ouse DJ. They think, 바카라we are paying money, so we can ask them to play whatever song we want them to play, and they have to play it바카라. And because it is so common, even musicians just treat it like 바카라oh, another bad gig바카라. I have tried to write about such incidents myself on social media, but then I didn바카라t, because I feel no one would even talk about this,바카라 explains Varun Rajput, the composer, vocalist, guitar player and founder of the popular indie rock project Antariksh.

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DJ record producer Sartek

However, while Rajput feels that such persistent abuse probably are more directed towards musicians who play an instrument, DJs, too, have faced similar behaviour. In fact even worse, since it is assumed that a DJ has access to all the songs that an audience can think up just at the wilful push of a button.  

바카라I remember many years ago, someone from the audience came up to me and paid me Rs 50 to play a certain song. I took that, and I didn바카라t play his song. After the show got over, he came after me and asked me to return the money. He clearly did not understand how such things work, and assumed that I would play his song because he paid me Rs 50,바카라 recalls DJ producer Sartek.  

But while that badly curdled sense of entitlement persists and it is an established norm that indie musicians on the fringes of popularity have to take such dispiriting incidents in their stride while performing live, many, including musicians themselves, feel that artistes need to able to manage events on their own.  

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바카라People see me and my turban and they think I will sing Punjabi songs,바카라 says sin­ger-songwriter Vineet Singh Hukmani. 바카라So, when someone says bhangra or Punjabi or whatever, the drummer in my band plays a bhangra beat for a few seconds and then we start playing our rock music. The idea is to be able to handle situations and not make it an us vs them kind of issue. If you convey the message that you are there for your audience, you can avoid such incidents,바카라 he adds.  

Raftaar concurs. 바카라This sense of entitlement comes from the fact that everyone as a kid saw their father behave rudely with a clown who had come to entertain kids at a party. So it is not going to go away. As an artiste you need to be aware and adapt to the situation. If I see some people at a table who I think might create a problem, I바카라d send a bottle of champagne straight to them and ask the waiter to tell them that I have sent it. There you go, you have already taken care of a situation,바카라 he says.  바카라Of course, I am not saying every artiste can afford that, just that artistes need to be tactful in such situations and, you know, not let it get to them,바카라 Raftaar adds.

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From left, Entertainment specialist Nitin Arora; Varun Rajput of Antariksh and concert producer Vincent

Such pandering to unr­uly elements at an event바카라a practical ruse, undeniably바카라for the sake of maintaining the equilibrium needed to perform cannot be a foolproof solution. Organisers and event managers too, need to be made aware of a musician바카라s rights, and that바카라s probably the failsafe way to avoid such incidents.

바카라It has to be the responsibility of the event manager, or whosoever organises the event, to ensure artistes바카라 safety and to make sure unsavoury episodes don바카라t happen,바카라 says Aditya Mohanan from the metal band Midhaven. 바카라I rem­ember so many incidents during our shows, when the person handling the sound mixer was doing it for the first time in his life. Things like that, and the entire haggling process with organisers바카라god save an artiste바카라s soul here in India. The organisers need to step it up and make artistes feel safe,바카라  he says.

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In a music scene severely mangled by the pandemic, where live shows have dwindled considerably, many feel it is imperative that an artiste, before a gig, should research the venue and the kind of audience that generally visits it. Then there is the matter of clarity on the nature of the performance itself.

바카라There needs to be clear communication from the organiser on the kind of music that is going to be played at their venue. You cannot expect the audiences to be okay if you play DJ nights three or four days of a week and then suddenly have a live rock night on a weekday. So, cost cutting on things like marketing or promoting an event might be very small details that organisers think are ripe for saving up on, but these little details play a very imp­ortant part on the day of the live show,바카라 adds Hukmani.  

Nitin Arora, entertainment specialist and MD, Katalyst Entertainment, feels that organisers are responsible for providing the artiste security and also act as a bridge between her and the audience, to minimise chances of any unpleasant incident at during or after the show.

바카라Small things, like making a stage on a platform, so that you cut off audience access on to the stage, or stationing a few bouncers there. If you get five-six bouncers around a stage, 90 per cent of this won바카라t be a problem. So, it has to be organisers바카라 responsibility to make their artiste feel safe,바카라 he adds.  

Vincent, a pioneer of international concert production in India, with over 25 years of experience, feels a set of demands and requirements help art­istes, regardless of their fame and stature, in establishing a few 바카라ground rules바카라 before their performance, and help them steer clear of any disturbance. 바카라I feel it is very important to even have a line put on an email or something like that, where you as a musician keep a checklist of your demands,바카라 he says, explaining the importance of a tech rider.  

A tech rider, Vincent says, not only helps art­istes seem professional in their work, but also helps them, legally speaking, to expect acc­ountability from the event organisers. 바카라It could even be a beverage or a certain kind of sound equipment. But what happens with that is that the organiser will immediately take these things ser­iously and, more importantly, you as an artiste,바카라 says Vincent. 바카라By law, they are bound to that, because the contract says that the organiser will take care of your dem­ands, whatever they may be, to provide a conducive environment for you to perform in,바카라 he adds. The concert producer thinks up a host of unpleasant scenarios: 바카라Forget a bar fight, or a scuffle. What happens if the singer gets an electric shock from the mic? Who will be res­ponsible? That is why you need documentation, and that바카라s the only way you can go through with this,바카라 he says.  

Such a phalanx of precautionary steps can certainly obviate undesirable happenings at a live act. Whether they can gradually inculcate respect towards musicians amongst a section of Indian audiences is another question altogether.

(This appeared in the print edition as "Gangsta Talk바카라s Blowin바카라 A Fuse")

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