Concocted with Hindi rock, dreamy and soothing music, Saturday night was a perfect end to the week that was. Lilting to the tunes of Maeri and Dhoom Pichak Dhoom, Delhiites couldn’t help but feel euphoric at heart. It was Palash Sen’s Euphoria performing live in Delhi’s Raag Rang festival, 2013. Fueling it with the power of Uma Lala’s Sindhi Music and Indian Idol 4’s Mohit Lalwani on Sunday, the festival ended on its crescendo.
The penultimate day of Raag Rang hosted the makers of the popular band with the curly haired magician Palash spellbinding his audience. Audience waved away to the beats and drowned in the delirious experience. Just the type of charm you give away to, when Euphoria kicks in. Peppered with Sindhi music, the festival took a dip into the house of earthy tones.
A week marked with the best in music congregating under one single banner Raag Rang draws to a close, leaving Delhi on a musical high! It featured artists like Shubha Mudgal, Jasbir Jassi and Atique Hussain Hyderabai, sheathing Delhi in the magic of music.
‘Through this festival, our endeavor is to bring to the people some viable and multifarious performances in different colors of music and art from our own soil, and make the people proud of their rich and diverse cultural heritage,’ says Sindhu Mishra, deputy secretary, Sahitya Kala Parishad. Organised under the aegis of Delhi government’s Department of Art, Culture and Languages, the festival proved to be a feast for the music aficionados.
We are surely looking forward to next year!
The penultimate day of Raag Rang hosted the makers of the popular band with the curly haired magician Palash spellbinding his audience. Audience waved away to the beats and drowned in the delirious experience. Just the type of charm you give away to, when Euphoria kicks in. Peppered with Sindhi music, the festival took a dip into the house of earthy tones.
A week marked with the best in music congregating under one single banner Raag Rang draws to a close, leaving Delhi on a musical high! It featured artists like Shubha Mudgal, Jasbir Jassi and Atique Hussain Hyderabai, sheathing Delhi in the magic of music.
‘Through this festival, our endeavor is to bring to the people some viable and multifarious performances in different colors of music and art from our own soil, and make the people proud of their rich and diverse cultural heritage,’ says Sindhu Mishra, deputy secretary, Sahitya Kala Parishad. Organised under the aegis of Delhi government’s Department of Art, Culture and Languages, the festival proved to be a feast for the music aficionados.
We are surely looking forward to next year!