Updated On: 09 October, 2022 08:10 AM IST | Mumbai | Nidhi Lodaya
Here’s how Bollywood composer Shantanu Moitra embarked on a cycling journey along the banks of the Ganga, composing music along the way, and discovering a new India for a six-episode documentary

The idea to collaborate with musicians to record songs in nature and get them to the location he was travelling to, was to move away from the studio setup
Shantanu Moitra says that his love for trekking, and travelling in hilly terrains, stems from the fact that he is a “Bengali raised in Delhi. Trekking was a big part of my life, just like music.” He has now taken that love seriously, and is talking to us about Songs of the River, a six-episode expedition of cycling along the banks of the Ganga.
The composer behind hits like PK (2014) and 3 idiots (2009) wasn’t always a musician. In fact, it was a need of the hour to fund his travels that forced Moitra to take up music as a profession. His first job was at a bank and that is where he realised that, “the romanticism of me travelling around the country will not be possible if I get into a corporate job.” After quitting his job at the age of 35, he started composing jingles to sustain himself financially and to travel. It worked! In fact, after he did PK, he declined all offers and spent the next 100 days travelling across the Himalayas. “Music was not the ideology here,” he shares with mid-day over a telephonic interview. “[You could say that] I was running away from music and wanted to rediscover my love for travel. But in the process, on the 20th or 25th day, I started humming something which wasn’t for a movie. This composition was steeped in folk and classical music,” he says. This adventure later turned into his project 100 Days in the Himalayas, where he engaged with musicians beyond Bollywood and discovered another world of music.