Updated On: 14 July, 2024 06:55 AM IST | Mumbai | Meenakshi Shedde
The very large project team includes Lisa Bjorkman, Rohan Shivkumar, Sitaram Shelar and MC Mawali.

Illustration/Uday Mohite
The highlight of this season was Music of the Forest, an electrifying concert last Thursday. Featuring Swadesi—including MC Mawali, Bamboy and Maharya—along with Prakash Bhoir, Adivasi activist and musician, it brought the crowd to its feet, with music that was hypnotic, yet the lyrics were sharp and thought provoking. It also gave voice to musicians who are not uber cool, upper class, SoBo types, but rather voices from the margins and adivasis, people who walk the talk, and dream of a revolution. Performed at the Coomaraswamy Hall, CSMVS Museum, Mumbai, the concert was part of The Forest in the City project of the Kamla Raheja Vidyanidhi Institute for Architecture and Environmental Studies (KRVIA). The Forest in the City: Living within Sanjay Gandhi National Park/Aarey Colony in Mumbai, is a fantastic and mindful exhibition exploring the links between the forest and city, that ends on Wednesday, July 17 at 6 pm. Don’t miss it! Linked to the exhibition were also “Conversations in the Clearing”, a series of events that hoped to provoke a conversation between stakeholders around questions of identity, rights and culture in the forest. The overall programme explored the rights and needs of indigenous people, their history, culture, music, films, with design interventions and more, over three years. The very large project team includes Lisa Bjorkman, Rohan Shivkumar, Sitaram Shelar and MC Mawali.
Swadesi is a collective of socially conscious rappers, writers, DJs and music producers. Last week, they rapped in Hindi, Marathi and Bengali, and their rap was also influenced by folk and classical Carnatic music, including konnakol (vocalising syllables), as well as reggae. Bamboy’s track Sthiti includes the lines, “LGBT community ko Levi’s deta slot/Aur sadkon pe hijde majboor 300 mein dete shot.” MC Mawali’s (Aklesh Sutar) tracks, included Badhte Kadam and Dheere dheere bol (Mumbai Aamchi) with sharp, cynical lyrics, raising social awareness. The Warli Revolt featuring Prakash Bhoir with Swadesi-MC Mawali, MC Todfod and 100rbh (1.9 million views), has a hypnotic animation music video on Youtube, and includes the lines: Aaz nahi udyala marayacha, mag kashala maaga sarayacha? (Death will come today or tomorrow, so why be afraid and step back—from protecting the jungle)? Swadesi’s popular tracks that they performed, included Kranti Havi, Salaam, Samzun Umjun, and Bhoir x Swadesi’s Wagh Deva and Adivasi. In fact, along with art and theatre explorations, the Adivasi song was commissioned by the KRVIA as a collaboration between Swadesi and Prakash Bhoir. They also sang unreleased tracks, including Divas Hay Nawa and Kavla. Their collaborators have included Delhi Sultanate, and many of their songs are backed by Bandish Projekt, among others.