Thursday, May 14, 2026

 

The A.R. Rahman Question:

Genius, Global Branding, and the Economics of Prestige

By Patrick P. Sawian

 

Few Indian musicians occupy cultural space as large as A. R. Rahman. To millions, he is a genius, a spiritual innovator, a technological pioneer who modernized Indian film music and carried it onto the global stage. His rise from the revolutionary soundtrack of Roja to the Oscar and Grammy success of Slumdog Millionaire transformed him into a symbol of Indian cultural globalization itself. Yet the mythology surrounding Rahman deserves critical examination. Because there is an uncomfortable question hidden beneath the awards, reverence, and cinematic emotion - Was Rahman’s Grammy recognition purely an acknowledgment of musical genius — or was it equally, perhaps more significantly, recognition of his usefulness within the machinery of global capitalist entertainment?  That question is not an insult. It is a serious inquiry into how international cultural prestige actually functions.

 

 

Rahman undeniably changed Indian film music. In the 1990s, he introduced a sonic polish and electronic sophistication that felt radically modern compared to the orchestral melodrama dominating mainstream Indian cinema at the time. His layering of synthesizers, ambient textures, digital production, and global instrumentation created an entirely new soundscape for Bollywood and South Indian cinema. Songs no longer merely accompanied films; they became immersive emotional products engineered for mass replay value. And that last phrase matters - engineered for replay value. Rahman’s greatest strength may not be classical compositional complexity in the Western conservatory sense, nor revolutionary harmonic innovation comparable to figures like Igor Stravinsky, Miles Davis, or John Coltrane. His genius lies elsewhere — in emotional accessibility, production aesthetics, melodic atmosphere, and cultural market translation.

Rahman mastered the art of making Indian music globally consumable without making it entirely foreign to Indian audiences. That is an extraordinary commercial and cultural skill. But commercial-cultural skill is not always the same thing as groundbreaking musical genius. The global music industry rarely rewards the most technically advanced or intellectually daring artists. It rewards artists capable of moving markets, crossing demographics, and generating emotionally exportable products. Grammys are not awarded in some sacred mountain temple of pure artistic objectivity. They emerge from an industry ecosystem deeply intertwined with branding, market visibility, film distribution, streaming economics, cultural diplomacy, and Western narratives of “discovering” non-Western talent.

Rahman arrived at precisely the historical moment when global entertainment industries were searching for internationally marketable multicultural aesthetics. Slumdog Millionaire was not merely a film; it was a perfectly packaged globalization narrative — poverty, aspiration, chaos, hope, exoticism, modernity, and triumph compressed into a cinematic export product digestible for Western liberal audiences. Rahman’s music fit this machinery perfectly. The Grammy and Oscar victories therefore represented not only appreciation of musical craft, but also celebration of a product that successfully integrated Indian sound into a profitable global entertainment economy. In many ways, Rahman became the sonic ambassador of globalization-friendly India: spiritual yet modern, ethnic yet accessible, technologically polished yet emotionally universal. That is enormously valuable within capitalism. This in no way means that Rahman lacks talent. Far from it. One does not accidentally sustain decades of dominance in Indian cinema. His melodic instincts are remarkable. His production quality permanently altered industry standards. His ability to merge qawwali influences, Tamil folk elements, electronic textures, orchestral arrangements, and pop sensibilities into commercially successful music requires immense skill. But the language often used around Rahman — “once-in-a-century genius,” “Mozart of Madras,” “greatest composer India ever produced” — sometimes ignores the industrial nature of his success.

Much of Rahman’s work operates within film music, which is fundamentally functional art. Film scores are designed to enhance narrative emotion, market films, increase replay consumption, and maximize audience attachment. Unlike revolutionary classical composers or radical jazz innovators who transformed musical theory itself, Rahman largely perfected emotional cinematic consumption.

That distinction matters. A truly transformative musical genius changes the architecture of music itself. They create new harmonic languages, rhythmic systems, compositional paradigms, or aesthetic philosophies that permanently alter how future musicians think. Rahman modernized and globalized Indian film sound magnificently, but whether he fundamentally transformed music as an art form at the level of a Beethoven, Coltrane, or Stravinsky remains debatable. In fact, one could argue that Rahman’s greatest innovation was not purely musical but infrastructural and economic. He helped professionalize sound production standards in India. He normalized technologically advanced studio culture. He contributed to making Indian cinematic music internationally marketable at unprecedented scale. He became part composer, part brand architect, part cultural export mechanism. Capitalism loves figures like this. Not because capitalism hates art, but because it rewards art that can travel efficiently through markets. The Grammy system itself reflects this reality. Countless technically astonishing musicians across African, Middle Eastern, Asian, experimental, jazz, folk, and classical traditions remain globally obscure because their work lacks commercial scalability. Meanwhile, artists who successfully bridge authenticity and accessibility often become international icons. Rahman’s brilliance lies precisely in that bridge.

Critiquing this does not diminish his achievements. If anything, it clarifies them more honestly. Rahman was not merely a composer sitting in isolation producing abstract genius for humanity’s spiritual evolution. He was also a master navigator of modern entertainment capitalism — understanding emotion, technology, branding, cinematic timing, and international cultural appetite better than almost anyone in Indian music history. That is not lesser intelligence. It is simply a different kind of intelligence. The danger arises when commercial-global success automatically becomes confused with absolute artistic supremacy. Awards often validate visibility as much as innovation.

Grammys especially have long reflected industry politics, market penetration, and cultural trends as much as pure compositional depth. Rahman’s Grammy therefore can be viewed less as definitive proof of unparalleled musical genius and more as recognition that he successfully helped integrate Indian cinematic sound into the global entertainment economy in a way that was emotionally profitable, culturally fashionable, and commercially scalable. And perhaps that is the real story of modern artistic prestige itself. Not who changed music most profoundly, but who changed markets most successfully while sounding profound enough for the markets to celebrate.

 

 

The Talent Show Illusion: Why Truly Great Musicians Should Be Careful Before Entering Reality TV Competitions

By Patrick P Sawian 

 

For decades, television talent shows have sold the same irresistible fantasy: an unknown singer walks onto a brightly lit stage, survives emotional background music, receives approval from celebrity judges pretending to discover oxygen for the first time, and suddenly becomes a global star. It is the modern fairy tale of democratic entertainment. The poor become famous. The overlooked become visible. The gifted are rewarded. At least that is the marketing brochure.

In reality, many talent shows are not designed primarily to discover the greatest musicians. They are designed to manufacture profitable entertainment products. And those are not always the same thing. This does not mean every contestant lacks talent, nor does it mean every winner is fake. Some genuinely gifted artists have emerged from these systems. But truly exceptional musicians — especially those interested in artistic longevity, originality, or technical depth — should approach these competitions with extreme caution. Because the modern talent show ecosystem often rewards not greatness, but marketability. The brutal truth is that television competitions function inside capitalist entertainment systems whose primary responsibility is not artistic truth. Their responsibility is ratings, sponsorship, emotional engagement, advertising revenue, and audience retention. Music becomes one ingredient in a much larger commercial machine. That machine loves attractive narratives. The shy underdog. The single mother. The struggling factory worker. The tragic childhood. The handsome heartthrob. The adorable child genius. The “unexpected” voice inside an “ordinary” body. The contestant is not merely competing as a musician. They are competing as a television character.

 

 

This is why many technically extraordinary musicians either lose these shows or never become commercially dominant afterward. Exceptional musicianship is often too subtle, intellectually demanding, or emotionally complex for mass television voting systems built around instant reactions. A perfect example is Melinda Doolittle from American Idol. Vocally, she was arguably one of the strongest contestants the show ever produced: disciplined, soulful, emotionally controlled, technically mature, and deeply musical. Many professional musicians still consider her among the finest singers in the program’s history. Yet she did not win.Why? Because talent shows rarely operate as conservatories of musical excellence. They operate as popularity economies. Viewers vote emotionally, visually, socially, and psychologically — not merely musically. Youth, image, relatability, market packaging, and demographic appeal frequently overpower technical mastery.

Meanwhile, contestants with more commercially moldable identities often receive stronger industry investment. A pretty face with a competent voice and broad market appeal may generate more long-term profit than a vocally superior but less easily marketable artist. That uncomfortable reality has repeated itself globally. On The X Factor, many winners disappeared commercially within years, while certain contestants who fit broader pop-market aesthetics received aggressive label support regardless of relative vocal depth. The shows often prioritized contestants who could become profitable entertainment brands rather than enduring musicians.

Similarly, Susan Boyle from Britain's Got Talent became globally famous not simply because of her voice, but because the show engineered a powerful narrative arc around appearance, humiliation, surprise, and emotional reversal. The viral phenomenon depended as much on audience prejudice and shock value as on musical interpretation itself. 

 

 

One could even point toward Indian reality television itself as evidence that talent shows do not always reward the most musically accomplished performer, but rather the contestant who best aligns with public sentiment, emotional narratives, regional mobilization, novelty, or marketability. Consider Amit Paul from Indian Idol. Technically refined, emotionally controlled, and widely admired for his consistency, Amit Paul developed a deeply loyal following across India. Even today, many viewers continue to argue that he possessed greater vocal maturity and musical sensitivity than Prashant Tamang, who eventually won the competition. Yet talent shows are rarely judged purely through the lens of musicianship. Regional identity, emotional voting waves, mass mobilization campaigns, relatability, and public narrative often overpower technical considerations. Tamang’s victory became not merely a musical event but a cultural and emotional phenomenon tied to representation and collective sentiment. That does not invalidate his win, but it demonstrates how reality television frequently functions as a social popularity ecosystem rather than a rigorous conservatory assessment of artistic depth.

 

A similar argument can be made regarding Shillong Chamber Choir winning India's Got Talent. Their performances were undeniably polished, disciplined, emotionally effective, and unusual within the Indian television landscape at the time. The fusion of Western choral arrangements with Bollywood sensibilities created a freshness that audiences had not commonly encountered on mainstream Indian television. But novelty itself is an enormously powerful force within capitalist entertainment systems. Audiences are naturally drawn toward acts that feel visually or culturally “new,” even when competing performers may possess greater technical complexity or broader artistic range. Some critics and viewers felt that other finalists demonstrated stronger raw versatility or musicianship, yet the choir’s uniqueness, presentation, and emotional accessibility made them more televisually memorable. Reality television rewards memorability as much as mastery. A marketable cultural moment often triumphs over deeper technical evaluation because television is ultimately selling emotional impact to mass audiences, not conducting blind conservatory examinations behind closed doors.Television understands emotional manipulation better than most conservatories understand harmony.

Even highly successful contestants often discover that the industry values compliance over artistry. Contracts can restrict creative control. Labels may pressure artists into commercially safe material. Producers shape public identities carefully. Contestants become intellectual property inside entertainment corporations long before they become independent musicians. The system rewards speed, visibility, and emotional immediacy. But truly great musicians often require something slower and less glamorous-  years of obscurity, experimentation, technical failure, difficult study, and artistic evolution away from public voting systems.

Imagine asking young Miles Davis to survive modern reality television.

Week 1:
“Could you make the trumpet solos shorter and more relatable?”

Week 2:
“Can you smile more while reinventing jazz harmony?”

Week 3:
“America didn’t emotionally connect with modal improvisation tonight.”

The absurdity becomes obvious immediately. Many revolutionary artists would likely fail modern televised competitions because innovation often sounds uncomfortable before it sounds brilliant. Talent shows, however, reward immediate familiarity. A contestant singing a safe power ballad often has a stronger chance of surviving than an experimental composer attempting something musically transformative. This creates what might be called the “karaoke industrial complex” — an ecosystem where imitation is rewarded more reliably than originality. Contestants are often celebrated for reproducing famous songs with emotional precision rather than developing distinct artistic languages of their own.

The audience applauds- “You sound exactly like Whitney Houston!”

Which is impressive. Except the world already had Whitney Houston. Real artistic greatness usually emerges when musicians stop sounding like everybody else. The economics behind talent shows further complicate the situation. These programs are not charities for struggling artists. They are massive commercial enterprises involving advertisers, telecom voting systems, sponsorships, streaming rights, touring revenue, social media engagement, and brand partnerships.

The contestant becomes content. Their emotional breakdown becomes content. Their family tragedy becomes content. Their tears become content. Even their elimination becomes content.

A truly independent-minded artist may eventually realize they are participating less in a musical competition and more in an industrialized emotional-production system disguised as inspiration. This does not mean musicians should automatically avoid visibility or commercial success. The world is difficult enough already. Artists deserve opportunities. Some contestants genuinely benefit from exposure and build respectable careers afterward. But musicians should understand the difference between visibility and artistic development. A talent show may create temporary fame. It cannot substitute for deep musicianship. The greatest musicians in history were rarely built through public SMS voting systems. They emerged through obsessive practice, experimentation, mentorship, performance failure, intellectual curiosity, and years of artistic refinement invisible to mass entertainment audiences. Talent shows promise shortcuts to greatness because capitalism loves acceleration. Faster fame means faster monetization.

But art often matures slowly. The danger for truly gifted musicians is not merely losing a competition. The greater danger is allowing entertainment industries to shape their artistic identity before they fully understand their own voice. Because once the machinery labels you - the soulful contestant, the rock contestant, the emotional contestant, the marketable contestant, it becomes difficult to escape.

And perhaps that is the strangest irony of all. Many talent shows claim to discover individuality while operating through systems designed to standardize it into profitable categories. The stage lights shine brightly. The applause sounds enormous. The emotional piano music swells dramatically. But behind the spectacle sits a much colder question-  Are they discovering artists? Or manufacturing consumable personalities for the entertainment economy?

 

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

 

  Shillong the “Rock Capital”

                    That Never Quite Left Open Mic Night

     by Patrick P. Sawian

 

For decades, Shillong has proudly carried the title of “Rock Capital of India,” a phrase repeated with such unwavering confidence that one might reasonably expect the city to have produced the musical equivalent of Pink Floyd, Miles Davis, and Hans Zimmer combined into one terrifyingly talented Megha superhuman. Instead, what the world mostly received was: café acoustic covers, emotionally exhausted Valentine’s Day songs, church harmonies, denim jackets and endless performances of Hotel California by men who appear spiritually trapped in 1997.

Now before the pitchforks emerge, let us acknowledge reality fairly: Shillong absolutely has musical enthusiasm. The city breathes music. Teenagers own guitars before they own stable life plans. Entire neighborhoods can identify Bryan Adams songs faster than government officials can identify potholes. Somewhere in Shillong right now, a young man with shoulder-length hair is softly singing Perfect while staring at rain with the emotional intensity of a rejected Netflix protagonist. Music culture exists. But the uncomfortable question remains: If Meghalaya is truly overflowing with musical genius, why has the region produced so little globally significant original music?

 

Outside India, the one genuinely recognizable export people can point to is bollywood western classical fusion - talented, disciplined, polished, and innovative for Indian television audiences. The fusion of Bollywood melodies, Western classical choir arrangements, and emotionally accessible harmonies created something fresh enough to capture national attention. But let us all calm down slightly before declaring it a revolutionary musical civilization. That is not the same thing as creating a globally transformative musical movement studied in conservatories worldwide. Nobody in Vienna is currently analyzing “The Meghalaya Harmonic School.” Juilliard students are not losing sleep over advanced Meghalaya choral modulation theory. No jazz department in New York has urgently introduced “Bollywood-Valentine-Baroque Fusion Studies.” The experiment worked as novelty entertainment. But novelty is not immortality. And perhaps that reveals the deeper problem with Meghalaya’s music scene: the region that often mistakes applause for greatness. The Land of Comfortable Music.

One major issue is that Shillong’s music ecosystem rewards safe music almost aggressively. Soft rock covers. Acoustic heartbreak songs. Slow Bollywood ballads. Coffee-shop sadness. Church-friendly harmonies. Emotionally wounded men whispering into microphones while wearing scarves indoors. Entire careers are being built on four chords and unresolved relationship trauma. And listen — simple music is not automatically bad. Some of the greatest songs ever written are harmonically simple. But when an entire regional music culture becomes trapped inside permanent “college unplugged night” energy, artistic evolution begins quietly filing for divorce. Too many musicians in Meghalaya avoid genuinely demanding musical disciplines because difficult music requires something terrifying: discipline.

It is easier to sing Tum Hi Ho for the 14,000th time than spend ten years mastering jazz improvisation, orchestration, counterpoint, advanced harmony, progressive composition, classical performance, polyrhythms, or serious original songwriting. Why wrestle with complex harmonic structures when singing slow acoustic love songs already guarantees applause from people holding overpriced cappuccinos? Shillong has become dangerously addicted to easy emotional rewards.

For decades, some of our music associated personalities have occupied a peculiar throne in Shillong’s music culture: part folk hero, part eternal busker, part human tribute band to Bob Dylan. In Shillong, where every second café contains a man with an acoustic guitar and a scarf last washed during the Clinton administration. But therein lies the comedy. That trick of convincing generations of people that endlessly performing Bob Dylan covers somehow elevates one into the sacred pantheon of musical greatness. That’s not necessarily a crime. After all, cover artists exist everywhere. Weddings survive because of them. Corporate Christmas parties depend on them. Cruise ships would collapse without them. But there’s a difference between being an entertainer and being presented as a once-in-a-century musical visionary.  Outside Shillong’s nostalgic bubble, much of the world would simply see it as entertainment — a colorful performer doing Dylan covers with passion and personality. There’s nothing wrong with that. Entertainers are valuable. They keep crowds engaged. They create memories. They give people joy. Clowns do that too. And yes, before the defenders of Shillong’s sacred guitar unclehood start hyperventilating into their vintage denim jackets, the comparison is metaphorical. A clown entertains. A clown creates spectacle. A clown becomes memorable through personality as much as substance. Sadly the public image of some of our music associated personalities often functions similarly: less as a revolutionary musical innovator and more as a symbolic cultural mascot. 

 The problem begins when symbolism is mistaken for genius. Shillong has long suffered from a tendency to over-romanticize its music scene. The city proudly calls itself India’s “Rock Capital,” despite producing remarkably few internationally recognized original acts. The mythology is far larger than the measurable output. And some of us intentionally or not, became one of the central mascots of that mythology. Because that is the awkward reality hanging over Shillong’s annual Dylan celebrations like second-hand incense smoke. Year after year, guitars are tuned, Dylan songs are sung, and some amongst us publicly professes his/her admiration for the American icon with the devotion of a medieval monk protecting sacred scriptures. Yet despite this relentless idol worship, Bob Dylan himself has never appeared in Shillong. Not once. Not even accidentally. The man has toured countless countries, cities, arenas, and festivals across the globe. Yet Shillong remains untouched by the divine sandal of Saint Bob. One imagines Dylan somewhere in America vaguely hearing that there’s a mountain town in India that has dedicated decades to singing “Blowin’ in the Wind,” only to shrug and continue eating cereal. The irony is almost poetic. Shillong treats some of us as the chosen apostles of Dylanism, while Dylan himself appears blissfully unaware that this entire parallel universe exists. It’s like spending forty years building a shrine to a deity who keeps sending your invitations directly to spam.

Another issue is the region’s obsession with telling itself how naturally talented it is. If you spend enough time in the Northeast, you will hear this repeatedly- “We are naturally musical people.” Now this sounds flattering. It also sounds suspiciously convenient. Because the “natural talent” narrative sometimes becomes an excuse to avoid the painful truth that greatness usually comes from brutal sustained work, not genetics sprinkled magically over the hills of Meghalaya. Vienna did not become musically legendary because Austrian babies emerged from hospitals already understanding Mozart sonatas. Jazz musicians in New Orleans did not become revolutionary artists because the Mississippi River emitted basslines into the atmosphere. Great music scenes are built through obsessive practice, difficult education, relentless experimentation, elite mentorship, advanced theory, composition culture, criticism and most importantly uncomfortable artistic risk. 

 

 

Meanwhile, Shillong’s musical ambition often peaks at: “Bro, your version of Wonderwall sounds exactly like the original.” which is wonderful. Except the original already exists. This leads to Shillong’s greatest musical epidemic: the karaoke mindset and the karaoke civilization. The city is filled with musicians extraordinarily skilled at imitation. Shillong musicians can imitate American accents so convincingly that sometimes even Americans become confused. A local singer performing Summer of '69 may sound more Canadian than actual Canadians. But imitation is not artistic identity. The problem is not that Shillong musicians love Western music. Every culture learns from others. The problem is that too many musicians stop there. Instead of creating new musical languages rooted in Northeastern experience, many artists remain suspended forever between: copied Western soft rock, church choir traditions and Bollywood romance music. The result is technically pleasant but globally forgettable. A culture cannot become artistically immortal by endlessly performing other people’s emotional damage acoustically.

Then again there is a special kind of comedy flourishing on YouTube’s music scene: the “partial virtuoso.” These are musicians who proudly upload covers of notoriously difficult songs, complete with dramatic thumbnails and titles screaming “INSANE GUITAR COVER” — only to mysteriously stop playing right before the truly difficult sections begin. The intro? Perfect. The easy melodic first two minutes? Emotional and cinematic. But just when the terrifying sweep-picking run, impossible odd-time riff, or monstrous solo arrives, the video suddenly fades out like a politician avoiding tax questions. This is musical clickbait disguised as bravery.  Anyone can survive the opening minutes of a Dream Theater or Meshuggah song. The real magic lies deeper inside, where timing, endurance, phrasing, and technical precision become merciless. That is the mountain. Everything before it is merely the parking lot.

Even worse are bands hiding behind sequenced backing tracks and studio editing, creating the illusion of technical mastery online but collapsing in live performances where no invisible laptop is available to rescue them. Audiences eventually notice when fingers and sounds stop matching reality. True musicianship is not surviving the easy introduction. It is confronting the terrifying middle section honestly — even at the risk of failure.

Now here comes the truly tragic part. Despite all the self-congratulatory talk about Shillong’s music culture, most families still treat music like a decorative hobby unless immediate fame appears. Children are encouraged to sing — as long as it does not interfere with:exams, coaching centers, entrance exams, government job preparation, or becoming “respectable.” Parents proudly announce: “My child sings beautifully.” then immediately remove all available practice time and replace it with mathematics tuition and emotional collapse. The reality is harsh - world-class music requires enormous uninterrupted practice during youth. You cannot become a globally elite pianist, composer, jazz musician, conductor, or producer casually between homework and family pressure. Serious musicians elsewhere spend thousands upon thousands of hours training intensely before adulthood. Meanwhile, many talented children in Meghalaya eventually abandon difficult musical growth because survival anxiety enters the room holding a government exam application form. So the region produces many enthusiastic hobby musicians — but relatively few deeply developed masters. I know because I am a victim of this myself and time is a luxury.

Ultimately, Shillong’s music scene suffers from one massive psychological problem: comfort. The audience rewards familiarity. The cafés reward sentimentality. The market rewards safe emotions. The musicians reward themselves for participation. Nobody wants to be the strange and eccentric experimental artist practicing odd time signatures while everyone else is receiving applause for slowed-down Ed Sheeran covers. So artistic ambition quietly shrinks. And over time, an entire music culture becomes emotionally frozen.

There are exceptions, of course. Talented individuals absolutely exist in Meghalaya. Some musicians are experimenting seriously. Some composers and producers are trying to push boundaries. But the ecosystem itself still heavily rewards musical safety. It rewards sounding good immediately rather than becoming great eventually.

The saddest part is that Meghalaya and NE India in general could genuinely become extraordinary. The region already possesses: strong choral traditions, exposure to global music, multilingual cultural influences, natural performance confidence, and deep community participation in music. But potential without discipline becomes mythology.  And Shillong increasingly survives on mythology…….and the music festivals. Yes.

For years, the governments of Northeast India have discovered what may be the greatest invention in modern public administration: the taxpayer-funded music festival. It is a magical concept. Announce a “Mega International Concert for Tourism Promotion,” print giant banners with electric guitars and flames, fly in a few aging denture sporting rock bands nobody has Googled since 1998, hand out VIP passes to politicians, and suddenly everyone pretends economic transformation is taking place.

The roads may still resemble lunar craters. Public schools may lack resources. Young musicians may still be learning audio production from YouTube tutorials recorded in somebody’s basement in Ohio. But never mind all that — there is now a three-day “Global Music Carnival” featuring fireworks, selfie booths, and enough government flex banners to block sunlight from reaching the earth. Progress. Across states like Meghalaya, Nagaland, Mizoram, and Assam, governments have increasingly fallen in love with event culture. Every year produces another expensive festival marketed as a revolution for tourism and youth empowerment. The language is always cinematic. “Celebrating Talent.” “Empowering the Youth.” “Putting Northeast India on the Global Map.” One would assume from the advertisements that the region is on the verge of becoming the next Nashville, Vienna, or Seoul. Instead, what often emerges is a familiar cycle: temporary excitement, inflated contracts, VIP photo opportunities, confused tourists, and local musicians returning home with exposure instead of sustainable careers. Exposure, of course, is the official currency of the struggling artist. The politicians and organizers, however, mysteriously never accept exposure as payment. The real winners in many of these grand spectacles are the layers of middlemen orbiting the events like moths around a government-funded bonfire. Event organizers receive contracts. Sound companies receive inflated deals. Political allies become “consultants.” Hotel bookings multiply. Fleets of SUVs suddenly appear transporting officials who speak solemnly about “the creative economy” while sitting in leather seats paid for by people who cannot afford concert tickets in the first place. 

 

And then comes the press conference. Ah yes, the sacred ritual where politicians stand beside imported musicians and declare that music is “the heartbeat of our youth.” Cameras flash. Speeches are made about “world-class infrastructure.” Somewhere behind the stage, a local band is still sharing one malfunctioning amplifier between five musicians, because despite all the noise, very little long-term infrastructure is actually being built. That is the real tragedy hidden beneath the laser lights and drone photography.  A region genuinely rich in musical instinct and cultural diversity has become addicted to musical tourism optics instead of musical education. Governments would rather fund a three-night sometimes stretched to a one month spectacle than establish permanent conservatories, scholarship programs, production schools, or advanced training institutes. Why build a conservatory that could educate generations when you can organize a “Rock Fiesta Extravaganza 2026” with giant posters of flaming guitars? Then came the street gigs. The idea of promoting music through street gigs often feels less like nurturing artistic excellence and more like sponsoring a citywide bathroom-singing championship, where safe acoustic comfort songs drift through the streets while anything technically daring, original, or intellectually challenging is treated like an unwanted power outage.

But conservatories are boring. They require planning, qualified faculty, curriculum, maintenance, and measurable outcomes. Festivals and now street gigs are easier. You announce them loudly, spend heavily, dance awkwardly for cameras, and declare success before anyone asks difficult questions. Meanwhile, genuinely talented musicians in the Northeast often remain trapped in an ecosystem built around imitation rather than mastery. Cover culture dominates because structured musical education barely exists outside scattered private institutions. Thousands of young musicians can perfectly imitate Metallica, Guns N' Roses, or Bob Dylan, but far fewer receive formal training in composition, orchestration, jazz theory, film scoring, audio engineering, or music business management.

And why would they? The system rewards performance aesthetics over technical depth. The irony is painful. Northeast India genuinely possesses enormous musical potential. The region has natural singers, gifted rhythm traditions, church choir cultures, multilingual lyricism, and an unusual openness to global music influences. In another ecosystem, this could have produced internationally competitive composers, arrangers, producers, film scorers, and orchestral musicians. Instead, governments keep funding giant temporary carnivals that vanish faster than election promises. Imagine if even a fraction of those festival budgets were redirected intelligently. Instead of spending crores on one weekend of amplified chaos, governments could establish serious music conservatories in cities like Shillong, Aizawl, Kohima, and Guwahati. Not decorative buildings or money spinning ampitheaters with ribbon-cutting ceremonies, but actual institutions with trained faculty, recording studios, composition departments, and scholarships for poor students.

Even more importantly, they could sponsor short-duration educational clinics featuring internationally respected artists and educators. Not just concerts. Education. Bring in world-class jazz musicians to teach improvisation. Bring orchestral arrangers to conduct workshops. Bring Grammy-winning producers to teach mixing and mastering. Invite film composers to explain scoring. Bring music business professionals to teach publishing, royalties, touring, and intellectual property. Imagine the impact of a two-week clinic with serious global professionals working directly with local talent. A single masterclass from an experienced international arranger could teach more practical musical knowledge than ten years of watching cover bands perform “Sweet Child O’ Mine” at government festivals.

But education does not generate immediate headlines or immediate money the way concerts do. A politician standing beside an international celebrity guitarist creates a better Instagram post than a quiet classroom full of students learning harmony and counterpoint. The region’s music policies increasingly resemble event management rather than cultural development. Governments are treating music like tourism decoration instead of a discipline requiring investment, structure, and intellectual seriousness.

The saddest part is that ordinary people often cheer these spectacles because they mistake activity for progress. A giant concert feels modern. It feels glamorous. It creates temporary excitement in places starved for entertainment. For one evening, the crowd feels connected to something international. Then the lights go off. The stage disappears. The visiting musicians leave. The politicians congratulate themselves and the same young local musicians return home to bedrooms doubling as rehearsal studios, trying to learn professional techniques from unstable internet connections.

Perhaps the Northeast does not need another “Mega Music Festival” with exploding pyrotechnics and speeches about empowerment. Perhaps it needs fewer spectacles and more classrooms. Not the scattered private music schools that profess to uplift the poor by marketing themselves as charitable sanctuaries for talent for the underprivileged, only to turn students into unpaid genre-specific touring mascots whose compensation package consists mainly of applause, matching uniforms, and the lifelong privilege of learning one narrow specific genre saying, “At least I got to see Switzerland.”  We also need less political branding and more institutional vision. Less temporary noise and more permanent knowledge. Because real musical cultures are not built through endless government-sponsored parties or silly street gigs. They are built through education, discipline, mentorship, infrastructure, and the uncomfortable understanding that art requires more than loudspeakers and banners to survive. The city loves calling itself the “Rock Capital of India,” but true rock cultures historically produced original movements, difficult experimentation, rebellious innovation, and globally influential sounds. Shillong mostly produces emotionally sincere acoustic covers performed by men who appear one breakup away from writing poetry on Facebook. Again: pleasant. Sometimes beautiful.
Rarely revolutionary.

Conclusion:-

The Bollywood fusion choirs and Bob Dylan fans deserve respect for giving Meghalaya visibility and national pride. But one successful choir experiment alone cannot indefinitely sustain an entire region’s self-image as a global music powerhouse. At some point, a music culture must decide: Does it want applause or greatness? Because those are not always the same thing. Greatness demands difficulty. Difficulty demands sacrifice. Sacrifice demands obsession. And obsession is much harder than singing Valentine’s Day songs in cafés while everyone nods emotionally over garlic bread. The world does not remember cultures simply because they loved music. The world remembers cultures that changed it.