Chandru

Location:
London, UK
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Acoustic / Electronica / Pop
Site(s):
Label:
Bollywood Strings Records
Type:
Indie
About Widescreen - the Album



 



Widescreen is a special album of 12 tracks of music without words but each track uniquely has a story to tell. 



Chandru utilises a large orchestra of strings to create an ambience that special and one of its kind. This combined with aptly programmed electronic music, outstanding solo performances and a touch of Asia creates a perfect blend that transcends boundaries and is a language of its own. 



THe album which will be released later this year also featurs the theme song from the outstanding BBC drama 'Life isn't all Ha Ha Hee Hee'.



 



About

Chandru



 



With a credits list that includes such luminaries as George Harrison, The Cure, Ravi Shankar, Talvin Singh, Björk, Pepe Habichuela, Nitin Sawhney and Guy Sigsworth, it is of little surprise that Chandru is one of the finest, most in-demand violinists and string arrangers of his genre and generation.



 



He

also arranged the strings on the sound track for the

successful BBC drama

"Life

isn't all Ha Ha Hee Hee"

which has been one of

BBC's most rated Asian drama. 



Chandru's music training is, by no means, an ordinary story. He started learning and training as a vocalist not long after this third birthday but, with his father concerned that he may lose his way of expressing music when his voice broke, switched to the violin three years later.



He learned under his father’s tutelage – he being the local music teacher and it was scales, scales and more scales – with the watchwords of his father as true to this day as it was way back when, ‘If you get your scales right, you can do anything…’ His methods may not have come direct from the Yehudi Menhuin school but they were effective; he used to attach a nail to the wall and on the nail hung a sling in which the young Chandru rested his chin in order that he didn’t doze off while practising his scales at four in the morning before a full school day. Every time he nodded off, the sling jerked him awake and it was back to his scales, scales and more scales.



Having had several mentors over the years but no other formal training, Chandru – to this day – draws deep on the well of musical knowledge that his father instilled within him.



Chandru’s early musical career was spent combing film work – mainly in Bangalore and Chennai– with a burgeoning recording career. Indeed, during this period, his was a prolific output with a staggering collection of over four hundred recording to his name. He arrived in Britain during 1991.



Throughout the early part of that decade, Chandru combined his own recording work and burgeoning string arrangement career with teaching at the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan in London. This met with such a degree of success that his pupils performed regularly in the capital’s most prestigious venues: The Royal Albert Hall, Queen Elizabeth and the Royal Festival Hall. 



In 2000, Chandru released his album 'Emotions' featuring a

selection of beautiful classical string arrangements and

Indian solo instruments and percussion. He did this in grand

style with a live performance featuring 40 string players at

the Barbican.



 



During this period, Chandru worked alongside Ravi Shankar on George Harrison’s Chants of India album as well as adding his own, matchless, violin to – amongst many others – The Cure’s Numb; Talvin Singh’s Mercury Music Prize winning OK album and Nitin Sawhney’s Displacing The Priest record.



By the late nineties, Chandru was not just in exceptional demand as a solo violinist but also for his string arrangements that fused east and west in a hitherto unimagined manner – from which Strings of India and Bollywood Strings was born.

In



His arrangements have been featured prominently on albums by

Björk, Frou Frou, Kiki Dee and Nitin Sawhney – most especially on Prophesy, his critically acclaimed follow-up to the Mercury Music Prize nominated Beyond Skin (on which Chandru also featured). 



Chandru and the Bollywood Strings also collaborated with the renowned Flamenco player, Pepe Habichuela on the album Yerbaguena, released in 2001 about which Daniel Muñoz of

Flamenco-world.com wrote:



The Hindu musicians adapt easily to the compass of flamenco: their rhythmic language is far more complex than that of flamenco, so that seguiriyas sounds with impossible percussive phrasing and melodies that criss-cross in harmonies that make them seem familiar. Chandru, plays as if he were speaking straight to Pepe. His language is fluid and precise.



Chandru has subsequently work with Lamya – signed to Clive Davis’ J Records – on her Learning From Falling album together with a number of collaborative recordings with Dana Gillespie, work with

Rai-maestro Cheb Mami, Richard Horrowitz, The High Fidelity and working on Nitin Sawhney’s 2003 release, Human

amd his 2005 release, Philtre.



He

also toured with Nitin and the Britten Sinfonia, a stint that culminated in a sold out performance at the Festival Hall to both rapturous critical and audience acclaim.



About this,  The Daily Telegraph stated:

One felt there was a genuine meeting of minds between the orchestra and the

musicians.

Best of all was Homelands, a fusion that is both haunting and hypnotic and featured fine performances from the vocalist Tina Grace, singing Portuguese lyrics, and the violinist

Chandru.



Since 2003, Chandru has been based in Britain and India,

running his own studio  SA Digital Recordings in Bangalore where the majority of his unique string arrangements are recorded under his direction, using the finest orchestral and individual players drawn from three Indian states. Indeed, it is not uncommon for Chandru to record orchestra’s with string-strengths of over 100 players to enable him to create his inimitable sound.



Besides his solid series of string arrangements for various

albums and films and a plethora of solo albums already to his name, Chandru

has recently completed his new album called "Widescreen"

which is due for release this year.
0.02 follow us on Twitter      Contact      Privacy Policy      Terms of Service
Copyright © BANDMINE // All Right Reserved
Return to top