Badmarsh & Shri

Badmarsh & Shri are an electronic/trip hop duo from London, England, comprising the Yemen-born DJ Mohammed Akber Ali, aka Badmarsh, and the Mumbai-born Indian tabla player, Shrikanth Sriram.[1]

Formation

Prior to their formation, Badmarsh (whose name means 'rascal' in Hindi)[2] worked at the reggae studio Easy Street; which was hiring PA equipment to a nightclub called Labyrinth. After a visit to Labyrinth, he became interested in DJing, and almost immediately went out to buy DJ turntables and records; he later secured a residency position at the club, where he remained for five years. Shri, on the other hand, had spent five years touring with Nitin Sawhney,[2] who later produced his debut solo album Drum the Bass. The album was well received in Europe.

The duo came together through Shabs, head of Outcaste Records, who thought that the pair's individually different sounds would complement each other in a group. The duo released their debut album Dancing Drums in 1998, which contained a culmination of drum and bass, hip hop, Indian classical music and jazz.[2]

Albums

Dancing Drums

Dancing Drums was the band's first album.[2] The name comes from a 1975 track of Ananda Shankar.

AllMusic rated the album 4 out of 5 stars, praising Shri's melodic basslines and strong tabla rhythms, and concluded that "Several tracks go on a couple of minutes too long, and techno snobs will find its pleasantness objectionable. Overall, though, this album is a success."[3]

Signs

In 2001, Badmarsh & Shri released their second album, Signs, originally called Tribal (co-produced by Mike Spencer) through Outcaste Records. A continuation of their musical migration, the album was considered panoramic dance music by the record's publishers, switching between dancefloor music, and a more sensuous, chilled style.

We wanted to make music that moved you on the dancefloor as well as at home. Everything had to be emotive, whether it made you angry or made you swoon. But it also had to funk. We wanted it to be about feeling rather than thinking - that was our vision,"

Badmarsh and Shri[4]

The duo drew their inspiration from their respective backgrounds of dancehall and hip-hop, as well as funk, Latin and African rhythms. They also made use of strings, synthesizers and flute, along with the vocal talents of UK Apache, who is also considered an integral part of live shows.

The title track to Signs was featured in the closing credits of the thriller film, Battle in Seattle. It also charted at No. 63 on the UK Singles Chart.[5]

gollark: Hi.
gollark: Well, that's probably either "I did but won't say so" or "I'm going to unnerve you a bit", who knows which...
gollark: Unless Anavrins already copied the key when it was in my end base.
gollark: <@111569489971159040> Fortunately, the new location of the new key should be proofed against such things.
gollark: That is a reasonably large monitor.

See also

References

  1. Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture, p. 279, 1134700253, Alison Donnell, 2002; "A second album Tribal, written and recorded with Badmarsh was released early on in 2001 on Outcaste. As with Drum the Bass and Dancing Drums, Shri plays the majority of the live instruments. The duo performed material from Tribal at the London Jazz Festival...
  2. Colin Larkin, ed. (2000). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Nineties Music (First ed.). Virgin Books. p. 32. ISBN 0-7535-0427-8.
  3. "Dancing Drums - Badmarsh & Shri | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 4 April 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "BADMARSH and SHRI". The Official Charts Company. Retrieved 28 October 2016.
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