BALLY SAGOO
The Wire, 1995? or Observer?
by
Simon Reynolds
White English pop is in a sorry state
these days. From the Swinging London fixations of Blur, through the mod revivalism of the New
Wave Of New Wave, to Smiths-retreads like Echobelly and Gene, nostalgia is the
order of the day. Drawing on an ever
more circumscribed and depleted range of whiter-than-white influences--The Who,
the Jam, Bowie, that most insular and parochial of artists, Morrissey-- bands
hark back to the lost golden age of
Brit-pop.
So it's hardly surprising, that the only
truly vibrant music in this country is that which reflects, rather than denies,
the multiracial, culturally promiscuous nature of '90s Britain.
Take jungle, a
frenetic hybrid of hip hop, reggae and techno with a black-and-white underclass
following. And look at the rise of Asian
rap groups like Fun-Da-Mental and Asian
ragga-dancehall artists like Apache Indian.
The latter may soon be joined in the charts by Bally Sagoo, Asian pop's hottest dance producer. I talk to 30 year old Bally during a hiatus
in the shooting of a video, at a converted church in Crouch End that's now Dave
Stewart's recording studio. It's Bally's first video, and it's for a
breathtakingly pretty song called "Chura Liya" that could be his
breakthrough into the mainstream.
Born in New Delhi, Bally was six months
old when his parents emigrated to England, and has lived in Birmingham all his
life. Music is in his blood: his father played in one of the first Asian bands
in Britain, the Musafirs, "a sort of an Asian version of The
Shadows". But Bally never really cared for traditional Indian music as a
boy, preferring the "hardcore street sounds" of electro and hip hop.
Now almost every genre of studio-concocted state-of-art dance informs his sound,
from house and techno to ragga and jungle.
Throughout the '80s, Bally honed his
production skills, remixing bhangra tunes and giving them the kind of
turbo-charged "beef" that he heard in Western dance music.
"To be
honest, I basically changed the whole of the Indian music industry, by bringing
in samplers and sequencers and modern beats".
In 1990, he started making his own music, and
has since released six albums that each sold over 100 thousand copies. After
last year's 'greatest hits' compilation "On The Mix" (through Island
's sub-label Mango), Bally signed to Sony in a massive deal that's potentially
worth 1.2 million. Now label, management and artist are all holding their
breath to see if Bally's past sales and
fan-base can translate into chart positions.
"My goal, and I keep my fingers
crossed and pray to God, is to see an Asian language song in the charts,"
says Bally earnestly. "Then you could really say, 'doors have been broken
down'. I don't wanna hear any crap about how people won't like it cos they
don't understand the words, cos there's been loads of foreign language
hits."
He compares "Chura Liya" to Enigma's
"Sadeness"--a fair analogy, as "Chura" seductively
interweavesethnic exoticisms
(Indian movie strings, tabla loops, sitar samples) with DJ-friendly beats.
"Chura" was originally written by
the late R.D. Burnam, one of the subcontinent's most famous songwriters and
'musical directors'. Bally went to India to get it resung, then took the vocal
back to his Birmingham studio and framed it in a "'90s ragga sound, with a
hardcore rude-boy B-line". As well as the romantic Hindi vocals, there's
a rap from Cheshire Cat, a white Brummie who chats in a thick Jamaican patois,
raggamuffin-style.
"Chura" is a taster for the album "Bollywood Connection",
named after Indian's motion picture capital. "The album consists of eight
superhits from the last twenty years. I do a kind of Jurassic Park thing,
bringing these dead and buried songs back to life".
Although Bally's a
Punjabi Sikh himself, he chose to work with Hindi singers. "You're
conquering a bigger market with Hindi.
Bengalis, Sikhs, Muslims, they all listen to Hindi songs, whereas
Punjabi bangra is more of a specialist scene."
Much of Bally's talk is of conquering
markets and how Asian music has yet to be "exploited properly". When
I suggest that even though "Chura" is a love song, its success might
have a political dimension--demonstrating to the racists and BNP that Britain
is now a multicultural society, that there's no going back--he shrugs. It's
clear that Bally's main interest in crossover isn't cultural integration so
much as maximum market penetration. He's an ambitious fellow who aspires to the
first rank of world-class dance producers--David Morales, Jazzy B (Soul II Soul),
Paul Oakenfold, Jam & Lewis, Teddy Riley--and is tired of being ghettoised
as an Asian artist.
He's also frustrated with the limits of the Asian market,
where 80 percent of sales are cheaply priced cassettes, and there's a massive
problem with bootlegging. (He tells me how one scoundrel in Canada sold 200
thousand pirate copies of one of his albums).
But Bally's transition to the mainstream
might not be that smooth, owing to the peculiarites of the Asian record
industry. Most Indian music is sold through cornershops, which is why Bally's
huge sales have hitherto failed to translate into hits (they've bypassed the
chart-return shops). Can Bally and his record company persuade Asian youth to
go into Our Price and HMV? And will Asian kids, who are used to paying 2-50 for
a cassette album be prepared to cough up eight, nine, ten quid?
It's a gamble for both Bally and Columbia,
but the stakes are high: it could be that Asian music will
have the same influence on '90s pop that Jamaican reggae did on the Seventies.
(Who knows, by the end of the century, maybe there'll be massive-selling white
bhangra bands, a la The Police and UB40...)
"Nobody can tell what's going to
happen in the future. We just have to hope that the public can accept this
music and bring it to the same level that house, ragga, techno, are at the
moment. It shouldn't be a specialist
thing, it should be up there, loud and proud. Specialist just doesn't make
sense."
This reissue dedicated to Koushik Banerjea and Partha Banerjea - nuff respeck from "The Information Centre" ;)
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