
Wednesdays are a different world at the Orchid Lounge. It8217;s the night when Hari and Sukhmani take their place behind the bar and serve a cocktail of music, one that puts a mute on the visitors8217; volume and entraps your senses with a sonic spell of electro-classical lounge music. If played well, that8217;s the effect live music can create, and on hearing this, city hotels are plugging in bands and musicians for the right feel and ambience.
8220;I8217;d been on the look-out for singers and musicians for long now, but not the usual orchestra ones with re-runs of old numbers. That was the difference I saw in Hari and Sukhmani, their sound is original, they are young and know the pulse of the crowd,8221; Priya Jagat of Orchid Lounge in Sector 34, floored by their 8216;electro classical lounge music with a touch of Sufi8217;, has signed the two for Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. 8220;Change is always good, and when you have a regular clientele, you want to give them something new, so I kept it to three times a week,8221; Jagat adds that now Chandigarh has a crop of technically sound young musicians who are ready to experiment, making the scene quite alive.
Check out the other venues in town, and there8217;s a live wire in almost every hotel. The Rodrigues, oldest and longest surviving band continues its live gigs. Sanjeev Kumar regales visitors with soft ghazals at Western Court in Sector 43, while Parminder and Jagdeep sing and sway to old numbers at Hotel Mount View, so does singer Rohina. On popular demand, Fun Republic8217;s food court has been alive with music and lyrics for more than a year now. Even Taj Chandigarh has a Philipinno band, Emotions making people dance at the Lava Bar. 8220;Live music8217;s quite a rage and hit, so we8217;ve kept it alive,8221; says Taj8217;s Executive Chef and F038;B, Neeraj. 8220;Music is food for ears. A great ambience coupled with light classical is the trend,8221; points of Western Court8217;s Group GM, Rajeev Kakar. 8220;It8217;s all on public demand, and these guys get Rs 500 to Rs 1,000 as tips!8221; adds Kakar. In the circuit for more than three years now, Parminder and Jagdeep keep getting requests for old Hindi and Punjabi numbers. 8220;For most people, the background music or a DJ translates into noise, they prefer live music because they get to hear what they like,8221; says Parminder.
Conventional sound can sometimes be a little jarring. For live music to be charged, it has to evolve. May be that8217;s why Hari and Sukhmani chose electronica, it8217;s limitless. Sing along8230;