Current:Home > InvestRevitalizing a ‘lost art’: How young Sikhs are reconnecting with music, changing religious practice -MoneyBase
Revitalizing a ‘lost art’: How young Sikhs are reconnecting with music, changing religious practice
View
Date:2025-04-11 21:38:38
Makheer Singh stood in front of the Darbar hall of a Sikh worship center in Southern California this summer − packed with several hundred people waiting for the teenager to play the taus.
As he played the notes of the instrument which dates back to the 1800s, Singh says he felt closer to his heritage and his religion. The 20-minute performance of an instrument that few people know of, and even fewer play, demonstrated how young Sikhs are revitalizing their music and transforming how the next generation will practice their religion.
“I’m trying to get this younger generation to start picking up these instruments,” Singh said. “It’s becoming a lost art. I’m trying to bring it back to life.”
Many Sikhs no longer play the taus, a large instrument with 18 strings shaped like a peacock that can be difficult to learn. The taus was replaced by many for the smaller and more portable dilruba, both niche string instruments within the massively popular music group of Indian classical music. They are important to Sikhs as two of their gurus played them, and some credit them both with creating the instruments.
Singh had played the dilruba and taus since he was 10. For the first few years, it was a friendly competition between Singh and his father. When his high school closed during COVID lockdowns, Singh spent his time trying to learn the roots of the music he had listened to his whole life, Sikh religious ragas.
Sikh religious scripture are written in ragas - a collection of notes and pitches meant to emote certain feelings. Each raga has specific religious meanings in the Sikh scripture.
“Whenever I felt lonely I just sort of utilized it as an escape from reality,” Singh said. “That’s what motivated me to now practice on my own, do things on my own.”
As his passion for the music and the instruments grew, he found that few still taught these centuries-old traditions. If he wanted the next generation of Sikhs to enjoy the music, he would need to be the one to teach it.
Now 18 and living in Pasadena, he makes a a four-hour roundtrip drive weekly to teach 50 students in Riverside, California.
Simardeep Singh is a student at the University of Southern California studying Computational Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering. In his free time, he also plays the dilruba. He is not related to Makheer.
Simardeep Singh learned to play from teachers in the U.S. and India, often online.
His dorm room is his practice studio. Beside his bed stands his piano, where he can check the pitch of notes against a gentle hum his computer emits. The hum helps him stay on cue, as he sits on his bed practicing the sarangi.
Simardeep Singh was determined to train on the sarangi (a bowed instrument similar to the dilruba) and dilruba, two instruments rarely used even in Indian classical spaces, because of the importance to his Sikh faith.
Sikh religious scripture are written in ragas - a collection of notes and pitches meant to emote certain feelings. Each raga has specific religious meanings in the Sikh scripture.
“If we can’t preserve the music that is behind (the scripture) how are we going to preserve the text?” Makheer Singh said.
Raspereet Kaur, 19, is a student in Makheer Singh’s Friday advanced class at the Khalsa School, which serves all ages, teaching topics from Sikh history to the dilruba. Students leave their shoes outside the doors and sit in classrooms lined with a silky soft carpet that spreads underneath the desks and white fluorescent lights.
She has been learning to play the dilruba for about a year and a half after seeing Makheer Singh play at local events.
Kaur uses these lessons and her nearly daily practice on the dilruba to connect with her faith.
“It’s a really big honor to learn from someone that is so well known,” Kaur said, “getting to learn from the best basically.”
Makheer Singh plans to continue teaching and attend UCLA in the fall, looking forward to a career in the music industry. He already publishes music mixing traditional ragas with contemporary styles.
On Spotify Makheer Singh has over 400 monthly listeners and hosts tracks such as Caliginosity and Kolorful, where he mixes traditional Indian classical music with contemporary lo-fi electronic beats.
“What I do with this music with these ragas I layer on top of hip-hop, R&B music, and I release them − so it tracks this younger generation,” he said. “This community is so important to me and this is just my little way of giving back to it.”
veryGood! (19532)
Related
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- WhatsApp glitch: Users report doodle not turning off
- Thousands of US Uber and Lyft drivers plan Valentine’s Day strikes
- Mystery ship capsizes in Trinidad and Tobago, triggering massive oil spill and national emergency
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Suspect captured in fatal shooting of Tennessee sheriff's deputy
- What is income tax? What to know about how it works, different types and more
- A day after his latest hospital release, Austin presses for urgent military aid for Ukraine
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- NATO chief says Trump comment undermines all of our security
Ranking
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- How previous back-to-back Super Bowl winners fared going for a three-peat
- Report: ESPN and College Football Playoff agree on six-year extension worth $7.8 billion
- Minnesota health officials say Legionnaires’ disease outbreak in Grand Rapids linked to city's water
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Mental health emerges as a dividing line in abortion rights initiatives planned for state ballots
- Charges against Miles Bridges connected to domestic violence case dropped
- Nick and Aaron Carter's sister Bobbie Jean Carter's cause of death revealed: Reports
Recommendation
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
Indonesian voters are choosing a new president in one of the world’s largest elections
Pond hockey in New Hampshire brightens winter for hundreds. But climate change threatens the sport
Stock Up on Outdoor Winter Essentials with These Amazing Deals from Sorel, North Face, REI & More
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
You'll Go Wild Over Blake Lively's Giraffe Print Outfit at Michael Kors' NYFW Show
Kylie Jenner Flaunts Her Toned Six Pack in New Photos
Chocolates, flowers and procrastination. For many Americans, Valentines Day is a last-minute affair