GMI x AHH | Review: Rohan Prasanna expends creative, genre-flitting energy on ‘Bouquet of Life’

GMI x AHH | Review: Rohan Prasanna expends creative, genre-flitting energy on ‘Bouquet of Life’

We’re excited to announce our collaboration with A Humming Heart, an independently run, reader-supported, Indian music publication. Together, we bring to you an assortment of all things music- reviews, interviews, industry trends, and more. To kickstart our collaboration, we are sharing Anurag Tagat’s review of Rohan Prasanna’s album ‘Bouquet of Life.’


New Delhi artist Rohan Prasanna has had a long-standing training in sarod from the age of seven—by Ustad Amjad Ali Khan, no less—so it’s safe to say that he knows what it means to be rooted in classical norms, but also experiment.

His guru Amjad Ali Khan has had decades of formidable fusion excursions (most recently with guitarist Joe Walsh), and Prasanna is clearly no stranger to it either. He has collaborated with New Delhi artists such as Anirudh Varma and the Revisit Project. Most recently, his work with rock band Kitanu also came to the front, with the release of their debut self-titled EP.

Setting out on his own with his album Bouquet of Life clearly means being totally unrestricted, if stylistic limitations were ever in fact an issue for Prasanna. As a vocalist, songs like ‘Out of Body’ and ‘She’s Like a Breeze’ ease the listener into fairly new sonic terrain—there’s classical vocal melodies, whistling and sarod, that’s almost played like a guitar. Then, on ‘Too Much Bro’, there’s a lot of abstraction, going from funky grooves à la Jacob Collier or Vulfpeck to what seems like an intentionally discordant shift into a classical sarod movement.

It’s confusing at this point, but in an intriguing way. Because we don’t hear that side present itself again for a bit, given the tranquil and vibrant mood of ‘Melodies of Enlightenment’ and the transporting jazz-fusion style of ‘Camel in A Club’, where Prasanna’s hushed a cappella sits subtly amidst swirling Middle Eastern melodies.

Prasanna returns to that sneaky, unpredictable style we’d heard before when we get to ‘Intellidjentlewomen’. He picks away at glistening melodies and an (obviously) djent-informed rhythmic pattern. It’s shapeshifting and ambitious, which means it could fail to hold one’s attention for its seven minute span but if you’re a fan of prog bands like Animals As Leaders, there’s something in here that will keep you hooked.

After scaling what is arguably a summit of experimentation on ‘Intellidjentlewomen’, Bouquet of Life wanders into the abstract space with mixed results. ‘Singing to You’ might stand out on its own, but in the flow of the album, it does little to hold one’s attention. ‘Room Vibes’ maintains the jam-like aesthetic that Prasanna has constructed on previous tracks, but doesn’t sound too different from what we’ve heard before. ‘Why You Goin’, however, sees Prasanna bow out strongly. There are dance beats straight out of an Indian street procession and jazz vocals going with strong keyboard melodies, with Prasanna, phasing in and out of them.

The Collier influence is undeniable in Prasanna’s playfulness and while the sarod artist has got a lot more styles in the mix on Bouquet of Life, it could still do with some more finesse.

Listen to Bouquet of Life:


In association with A Humming Heart

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