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Bhairavi Raman, Nanthesh Sivarajah — Syncretic LP vinyl cover
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BHAIRAVI RAMAN, NANTHESH SIVARAJAHSyncretic LP

Catalog
ES033
Format
12inch Vinyl
Release Date
Features
Standard

26.39

Tracklist

Awakening(Original Mix)

Bhairavi Raman, Nanthesh Sivarajah

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Elemental(Original Mix)

Bhairavi Raman, Nanthesh Sivarajah

0:00

Unfolding(Original Mix)

Bhairavi Raman, Nanthesh Sivarajah

0:00

Thunbam Nergayil(Original Mix)

Bhairavi Raman, Nanthesh Sivarajah

0:00

Seven(Original Mix)

Bhairavi Raman, Nanthesh Sivarajah

0:00

Guardian(Original Mix)

Bhairavi Raman, Nanthesh Sivarajah

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Kindling(Original Mix)

Bhairavi Raman, Nanthesh Sivarajah

0:00

About Release

Syncretic marks the debut full-length from Australian duo Bhairavi Raman, a Western and Carnatic violinist, and Nanthesh Sivarajah, a mridangam player and versatile percussionist. Both artists share a Tamil heritage, a current that hums across the album. Raman, from South India, and Sivarajah, from Sri Lanka, draw lines that connect Western practice and Carnatic tradition. This hybrid is central to Raman’s approach as a violinist, an instrument itself caught between East and West since the late 18th century. Her playing folds history, lineage and experimentation into music that acknowledges inheritance while gently rewiring its circuitry.Expanding on traditional music can be a precarious practice, but Syncretic never feels heavy-handed. Raman and Sivarajah exercise measured restraint, letting the Carnatic framework breathe even as it is refracted through contemporary tools. Delays, looping, subtle layering and synthesized harmonies tilt tradition into a new light without disguising it.Even within a contemporary framework, Raman’s rigorous Carnatic training under gurus Sri S. Varadarajan (India), Sri Murali Kumar (Australia) and Sri Gopinath Iyer (Australia) is unmistakable. She captures the spiritual and emotional essence of each raga: on Seven, the playful raga Bahudari becomes both centrepiece and conduit, while on the traditional piece Thunbam Nergayil, drawn from a Tamil poem, we hear a deeply personal iteration, a weeping euphony of mixed emotions hitting all at once. Tradition here is absorbed, expanded and reframed.Sivarajah’s command of the mridangam, honed by his gurus Sri Jambunathan (Sri Lanka), Sri Balasri Rasiah (Australia) and Sri T. R. Sundaresan (India), is central to his original composition Guardian. He sustains tradition while extending it through layering and sound-spatialisation. The mridangam here functions as both a structural and ornamental force, mapping continuity between inherited form and contemporary sonic architecture.Syncretic resonates as a space where Tamil heritage, diasporic memory and contemporary practice coalesce. Culture, like sound, circulates, transforms and persists. Tradition is not an archive but living material, a soundworld that lingers in the ears and the imagination.

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