In July 2011, I stood in a serpentine queue outside Hard Rock Café on Bengaluru’s M.G. Road. Inside, there was barely any space to move, as the crowd pushed and shoved through the room to find an inch to stand. But as lofty keys built anticipation and Carnatic vocal melodies made way for the first guitar riffs to cut through the air, everyone began craning their neck towards the elevated stage with mesmerized focus. We had all jostled to watch Agam unleash their take on traditional South Indian songs, a set infused with hints of Sufi and a tribute to master composer A.R. Rahman, an early supporter of the band. It was the first time I got to experience the full force of the band that has been steadily building their legacy since 2003 — taking the familiarity of Carnatic compositions and Malayalam folk songs and preserving their spiritual essence while also slamming on percussive power, towering prog guitars, sublime vocals and even violins.
At the time, Carnatic progressive rock — a fusion that Agam continue to champion even today — did not really exist. Even the band was still trying to find their footing and do justice to the tag. Sure, the likes of Motherjane’s Baiju Dharmajan were leading the way, but Agam leaned into it completely — interpreting ragas and compositions by poet-saint Thyagaraja, while also nodding to prog greats like Dream Theater, and peppering it with a bit of South Indian folk.
“I think our behavior as a band was also shaped by how the scene shaped us,” vocalist Harish Sivaramakrishnan says when we speak over a video call. “Like, if the scene remained as awkwardly disjointed as what it used to be, then it would have been a very different story. But I think the whole purpose of playing music got solidified because we got a great audience.”
From then to now, if there’s anything that’s constant, it’s that Agam have drawn audiences from across demographics, from ages 8 to 80. From the open-minded Carnatic music followers who count thalams on their fingers to prog rock and metal fans who want to headbang and behold the intricate and heavy rhythmic shifts — you’ll see them all at Agam’s shows.
Formed in Bengaluru between 2003 and 2007, just as they were transitioning from college to work life, vocalist (and back then, violinist) Harish Sivaramakrishnan and drummer Ganesh Ram Nagarajan had just begun jobs in the city’s software industry (naturally). Keyboardist Swamy Seetharaman had a few more years of work experience (“He was the only one that had money,” Sivaramakrishnan jokes) and guitarist T. Praveen Kumar had just landed a tech internship. Seetharaman was not just a band manager and catalyst for Agam (Sivaramakrishnan likens him to the manager and confidante character of Mangalam in the 2003 coming-of-age Tamil film Boys, essayed by the late great Tamil comedian Vivek), but also remains a key songwriter in the band to this day.
Seetharaman recalls lucidly how, in May 2005 in Bengaluru, they met at a South Indian restaurant in Indiranagar’s 12th Main. “I still remember that I crossed the signal, I met Harish and we went to a studio,” he says. A digital audio workstation called Paris was at their disposal and Agam first began recording music through “analog recording” and jamming. “I would say I’m a firm believer in energies and how you sort of resonate with people. When I met Harish and Ganesh, it was just that energy that was carrying forward,” he adds.
With a lineup that included bassist Vignesh Lakshminarayanan and percussionist Sivakumar Nagarajan at the time, they recorded songs like “Lakshiya Paadhai” and “Mystical Aabheri.” Seetharaman says that it was around then that they decided to go “all in.” It led to them winning the 2007 televised music competition Ooh La La La, where they were discovered by A.R. Rahman. In a retrospective to mark the release of Arrival of the Ethereal, Rahman said in a video message, “Very few bands have a belief in an identity, and that too from India. I find Agam one of those—a very strong identity […] They make their sound an experience.”
For Sivaramakrishnan, being part of Ooh La La La — the project that launched Agam into regional acclaim in South India, and even caught some national attention thanks to Rahman — was almost like getting the whole nine yards treatment that independent bands rarely got. “There would be a backline that you could rig your gear to, proper amps and a decent P.A. That was a big premium at that point in time,” the vocalist says. And, they got to play their own songs, a limited opportunity at a time when independent music festivals and platforms were far and few. “An added value was that potentially, A.R. Rahman would come and listen to you,” he points out. For Seetharaman, it was a watershed moment to believe he could make music, especially bolstered by the likes of Rahman, who appreciated his lyrics. He says emotionally, “[It was about] making people believe in themselves and giving that little nudge, saying, ‘Hey, I see something in you.’”
Agam went on to cinch bigger wins and gain wider exposure. And, although their day jobs took much of their focus for a few years, they also began chipping away at what would become their seminal debut album The Inner Self Awakens, which came out in 2012.
There’s no band quite like Agam. Yet, their story is stitched together with moments that reflect Indian independent music history’s enduring willingness to adapt. Guitarist T. Praveen Kumar, for example, was originally a keyboardist during the Ooh La La La phase. But during a 2008 gig in Chennai, he picked up the guitar, inspired by bassist, college senior and music club regular Aditya Kasyap. Before Kasyap was playing in the band, bassist Vignesh Lakshminarayanan had a guitar that he lent to Kumar just before this Chennai gig, and their then-drummer Nagarajan asked him to “fill the sound” on stage.
“I think I was learning the guitar even as the band was playing live,” Kumar admits, looking back. “If you go back and look at some of the early videos, [there are] a lot of bum notes on the Carnatic scale of playing. I think the entire band was patient. But I should say I picked up the guitar with the band and continue to [grow] as much as possible throughout the journey.” From prog riffs to Carnatic guitar fretwork, Kumar and Kasyap on bass now comprise the riff machine that you can hear on songs like “Over The Horizon,” “The Silence That Remains,” “The Celestial Nymph” and more, a sound they built together with then-guitarist Jagadish Natarajan. From: https://rollingstoneindia.com/agam-band-journey-cover-story/


