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Mad India , Day 1. Part 2 with a Vengeance

So with the people above the gym waiting to sing, I ran back to my room to grab mics and stuff. On the way back to my stay I heard a bunch of people cheering and loud drums so i took a left into one of the skinny street lanes and came up on wedding ceremony in progress, the band was nuts, all drums with a keyboard plugged into megaphone on wheels. So I got my stuff and returned and recorded a bunch of groups including this wicked old dude in the picture below who wrote the songs and acted out all the words. Coming to India i thought there was gonna be a majority of Buddist, but in Dharvari it’s pretty obvious that Christianity rules, there’s Jesus paintings and Stickers everywhere. And half the traditional songs i recorded are about Jesus. Anyways, after recording we had lunch which was so great, but what topped it off was my man Muhammad djing the lunch, blasting Vengaboys and Marakhi Dance hits way too loud. I guess from watching other DJ’s, Muhammad picked up about turning the knob’s to fix the EQ etc but he takes it to a new level, if there’s a knob on the mixer he turns it. After lunch he took to see the village’s sound system which is super massive. Koliwada gets down. Also today you can see in the streets that the decorations for Holi are starting to be put up.


Paulu Koli and Inson Maxi Koli

P.S. I have so many pictures i’m gonna have to make a photo page for all of them because it takes way to long to upload them here.

Posted by Paul Devro @ 4:10 am Comments (3)

 

Day 2: Koliwada Idol

KOLIWADA IDOL 2008

After a couple days being in India, Dharavi has officially beat down all my electronic equiptment. The cell phone i brought is totally broken, my computer doesn’t burn cd’s anymore, my travel power converter is blown and right as i was backing everything the power supply my external hard drive audibly blew too. So now i can’t access my external drive at all, I hope the drive isn’t screwed other wise i lost about 100 something pictures and some recordings. But either way things are still great.

Today Knokhi came up with the idea that we should set up somewhere in the street and record some singers. So we set up a table on the stage at the cricket field and thus was born “Koliwada Idol”. We had some great singers even a spell casting transvestite unic laid it down, but i had to give the prize to this little kid that sang 4-5 songs with snot rolling down his upper lip the whole time. After that I realized i need to get more cables and such so we went to the Electronics District on Grant Road. So much sweet bootleg gear and like 5 stores dedicated exclusively Remote controls??? After that we got invited to record a large group during the night. We wrapped up at 1am, all got served ice cream then they threw some baskets in the middle of the street, lit them on fire and we danced around them till they went out then called it a night.

***Word to Joesph for use of some of his pics to help me fill in the blanks.

Posted by Paul Devro @ 3:56 am

 

 

Day 3: Rooftop Recordings plus your Standard Canadian in India Tourist Pictures

For the Urban Typhoon going on there are all of artists and urbanologists doing alot in the slum here.  This is one of the hundred or more pictures that a local koli drew as on of the projects. All of the stuff going on over the week is going to put up later on Dharavi.org. I’ll post when its up and going. I’m really trying to get my hands on this baby massage video it’s crazy. I’ll post a link when i do.

When i first got to Koliwada I was trying to explain that i wanted to write some new songs with the locals and work together and make some tracks. They didn’t really understand what i meant, I think it’s because they mostly listen to Akon, Sean Paul, HIndi film scores or they just sing local songs that have been there for generations. So after 4 days I realised that i’d have to just do it to give them the idea. So we setup a speaker on the roof of the gym and i played a bunch of beats and instruments to my friends then we started getting somewhere. It was awesome I ended up spending the day recording up there. Also I arranged a Mad Decent Party on the roof for the locals and the people here for the Urban typhoon tomorrow.

So later we did more night recordings and this time in another hood and we seen what all the turf talk was all about. Koliwada is so dense the neighboring hood is just maybe 40 feet off the main path. You could feel there was something going on during the recording between our squad and the dudes who’s turf we were recording on, Mad beef.

Do you know how on Inspector Gadget how he’s just some idiot going around not really knowing what’s going on and he always solves the crime and stays out of trouble because his daughter and her dog are in behind the scenes saving him? Well that is exactly me in India, their my guardian angels in the slum here.

Posted by Paul Devro @ 3:56 am Comments (5)

 

Day 4: Mad Decent Roof Party

DJ Kombada - Spacial Mix

Tomorrow is the big day where everyone who worked in the workshop has to present their idea for the future of the Koliwada. Since its a sorta stressful time I thought why not throw a short party to give everyone a break from all their hard work. So today it’s the rooftop party! So we set up a system, bought a bunch of 2 litres of Thumbs Up and samosas literally by the kilo.

Anyways, with the party set for 7:30-10:00 and with no booze i was thinking i’d be like a meet and greet but OMG… It was nuts the rooftop was packed with locals and workshop people and man , Indian dudes dance, and like pros, by like 8:00pm the sun had dropped and all the locals were fiending for Hindi Remixes and Holi Songs. But if i did drop the wrong song i’d hear everyone shouting “No!!!!!” and i’d be surrounded by 20 Koli’s saying “change it, change it” it was hilarious! Most of their songs they have there own dance to, like the DJ Kombada (DJ Cock) track i posted, where they skip in a circle and uses their hands as the beak and tailfeather. They also did some mad square dance like one and one where they all ran around in a circle like they are going down a dancefloor sized drain. The cool thing was that compared to the hindi trance stuff i was playing when i did play my usual stuff i’d have to speed them up like plus 12percent to match the energy.

The best part of the whole night was how everyone, like everyone of every color danced their ass off. I had a couple people from workshop say they haven’t danced in years and they danced the whole night. So anyways at 10:30 we shut it down, we all ate samosas and called it a day. Damn, you can’t capture that on camera or film (literally my camcorder showed up pitch black) it probably the craziest party i ever played and it was drugless and alcoholess.

Posted by Paul Devro @ 10:09 am Comments (3)

Day 7: Silent Night, Holi Night Pt.1

So today is the night of dancing everyone in the village has been talking about. I thought cool okay, yeah lets dance and celebrate, i do that all the time. But as soon as I left my hotel in the morning it had already started. In the streets all i would see were these huge trucks loaded with people with flags bumping tunes driving down the street.

I was on the hunt for flea markets as i had some time for myself so i hopped in a cab with this dude that reminded me of a cab driver from TaleSpin or Rescue rangers or something.

Anyways we drove for like an hour not getting anywhere because streets were shut down for festivals and all these barges full of people and bass bins were filling up the traffic. So i got out of the cab because it was way faster to walk, I think the markets were closed or something, so i just walked around, i still haven’t bought a thing for my mom or anyone yet, so thats sorta lame. Anyways I spent the day coming up on parades of people worshiping speakers on trucks.


…click for a clip

I’d love to contrast these parades with the ones i’d go to growing up for Canada Day in my home town. So all day i didn’t find any markets that i was looking for but I spot 7 indians on a bike, can you beat that?

Later we all got together for the Holi Eve celebration. We walked to the Holi Maidan which ending up being quite a feat because the streets were rammed with people and dancing in their neighbourhoods and when they’d spot us they’d all grab us and kidnap us to the eye of there dancefloor and offer us drinks and food and would let us go . It was the craziest thing there was like a new sound system set up every 30-40 feet. So we finally made it to the Holi Maidan and it was rammed with people as well and there was a big tree in the middle. They brought us behind the stage and told us to go up the ladder, We had vip seats to like this Indiana Jones Ceremony. Every crew in the city got to have their band playing the Holi Song as they walked around the tree. The bands in Koliwada are badass, they consist of 6-7 drummers, trumpet player and one casio player who’s hooked up to a battery and megaphone thats strapped to a bicycle.


“Casio” playing is so popular that in the city there was even a sign that read “Singing, Dancing and Casio Lessons”.

So as the show went on there were fireworks which blew like 30 feet over our heads and then they lit the tree on fire. Women started walking around the fire with pots on their heads, adding another every lap then after like 10 or so pots they tossed them to the fire.

CLICK FOR HOLI CEREMONY CLIPS

After that we go to get in the line up with our village squad and go to walk in the line the the fire which was real sweet, i’m not sure how many people from outside of Koliwada have been able to do that. Too much typing next post is party time….

 

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