There is a rare stillness that descends with Gatra Veena… a kind that quietly seeps in, like dawn unfolding before one is fully awake. With his newly released bandish, National Award-winning Hindustani classical vocalist Mahesh Kale steps into an evocative space where the ancient and the contemporary do not merely meet, but gently dissolve into each other.
Rooted in the philosophical depths of the Natya Shastra, the composition draws from the idea of ‘Gatra Veena’ — the body as the first instrument. But Kale’s interpretation goes a step further, turning inquiry into experience. If the body is the instrument, who, then, is the musician? The bandish becomes a meditation on this very question, unfolding not as an explanation, but as a sonic journey inward.
In the song, Kale resists the purist temptation of presenting it in a strictly traditional format. Instead, he leans into an experimental arrangement, layering soft rock textures, gentle percussion and ambient tonalities beneath the classical core. The result is a piece that belongs equally to a baithak and as well as a modern listening room! As Kale said, “It is like it is preaching ancient wisdom, but in a contemporary soundscape.”
The bandish itself, with lyrics like “Mann gaye gatra veena, kar Omkar, kar nirakaar” invites one into a state of inner quietude. It speaks of emptying the mind, of shedding the constant urgency of doing, and allowing oneself to simply be. In this stillness, Kale suggests, the mind begins to ‘play’ the body, resonating with the subtle, eternal vibration of the Brahmanaad, the cosmic sound that is both eternal and unending.
Interestingly, the composition came to Kale during the Brahma Muhurta, or during the pre-dawn hours of an immersive retreat, a time of day long associated with clarity, intuition and heightened awareness. “In the early morning, way before sunrise, this bandish occurred to me,” he recalled, underscoring the intuitive, almost gifted nature of its birth.
The visual treatment echoes this inward journey. Conceptualised to mirror the fleeting, almost transcendental state of surrender, the video captures the idea of being ‘there but not’ while performing. One particularly demanding sequence had Kale submerged underwater for close to 45 seconds, repeated multiple times, pushing both physical endurance and emotional immersion. It is a striking metaphor for the song itself — a plunge into silence, into depth, into the unknown, emerging only with something intangible, yet deeply felt.
Early listeners have responded not merely to the composition but to its deeply soul-stirring impact. Many speak of an urge to pause, to sit with the echo of the music long after it ends. Despite the presence of drums and guitar, the experience remains meditative, reaffirming what Kale himself hints at… that music, at its most honest, bypasses intellectual understanding and goes straight to the self.
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‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source t2online.in ’














