Thursday 11 December 2014

When India Comes first



India First” is a relevant idea in the present scenario of 21st century, where India is not only a secluded concept, but rather a global one. Since 1991, when our economy opened up and assumed more global dimensions, as we graduated towards a free market society, the relevant social question of sacrificing our national interests for materialistic concerns has found a place in skeptical minds. As a direct fallout of the change, traditionally a culturally sensitive nation, India today faces the challenge of obliteration of its very concept. In this present age of capitalism, of rat-race for profit and individual needs, the question of whether India would survive bears significant proportion. Equally, in the bureaucratic framework, the problem of corruption lingers, which is the worst example of fulfilling individual aspirations at the stake of interest of our nation, where people still hardly manage two square meals a day! In this scenario, it is imperative that we address these concerns as soon as possible, so that India, as an entity can express itself independently to the changing world. This can only be achieved if people put aside their own aspirations that come in the way of the collective prosperity and growth of the country.
India has been a source of inspiration to the rest of the world, since time immemorial. Civilization in India dates back to 1700 B.C, the Indus valley civilization, when most people of the world were still nomads. Indians of that time had knowledge of urban planning, sanitation system, engineered metallurgy, and lived as a peaceful egalitarian society. Thus the Indus valley civilization left behind a legacy of knowledge and an era of arts, science, engineering and peaceful co-existence which manifested in culturally rich inventions. The digit zero and the numbering system, the decimal system, algebra, trigonometry and calculus, chess, the game of snakes and ladders, the value of “pi” are only a few in the count. Charaka, the father of medicine, practised medicine 2500 years ago. Ayurveda is the earliest literature of medicine known to mankind. The Aryans, the Guptas and the Mauryas left behind a culturally rich nation of non-violence and penchant for music, architecture, sculptures and painting superfluous with wealth, trade with foreign countries and overall a happy life. Due to its wealth, India has attracted foreigners, through her history. Persian invasion in 500 BC showed the way which was followed by the Greeks, the Turks, the Mughals, the Portuguese, the Dutch , the French and finally the English, who ruled for around 200 years. India, during these periods, was mostly ruled by selfish kingdoms under rival chiefs and rulers. Never united as they were, intruders took the best advantage of the situation and continued to plunder her wealth. Indians remained dumb and blind to these external aggressions. The freedom movement paved the way for building a united nation out of India. However, differences still exist amongst ourselves, we still prioritize region and language over the nation which has led to the continual fragmentation of the nation. Demand for more states keep arising time and again, from all corners of the country. Until and unless we imbibe the spirit of “being Indian” and put the nation ahead of all such differences, India will surely revert to its old self, a mere cluster of small states fighting against each other. Such social divisions made by ourselves need to be abolished. Or it won’t take long for another British Empire to crack us down. In such a situation, what more can we expect, except that we will be plunged in everlasting slavery.
Since our independence in 1947, we have seen a shift in India’s population patterns. The post-independence industrialization of various cities led to the migration of people of various linguistic groups from relatively rural areas. This led to conflicts between various groups for reasons ranging from accommodation to cultural xenophobia. The regionalist identities were given preference over the fact that they were after all, Indians. Mention may be made of Mumbai, then Bombay, where in the post-British era, speedy industrialization led to the influx of people from rural Maharashtra, the South and places like Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. This unprecedented inflow led to the problem of accommodation, and this gradually took the shape of one of the worst linguistic conflicts in this country. The reason was simple, people were exerting their linguistic authority, in a country where the Constitution has provided rights for Indians to settle anywhere across the State. On similar lines, communal riots have occurred regularly since Independence. The post-partition riots, anti-Sikh riots, post-Babri riots, and riots in Gujarat have been a blot on our collective conscience. What we cannot envisage is the communal disharmony and religious discrimination that infiltrates into the society defying all norms of humanity. Religious fanaticism receiving priority over Indian identity have created these indelible blemishes on our history. This is in direct confrontation with the secular ideals of the Constitution, where we have pledged to profess ideals of Justice, Liberty, Equality and Fraternity. It seems that these words have been confined to the pages of the Constitution, and have not been reflected in the hearts and minds of people. Until and unless we put India first over our alignment to petty interests, we will continue to tarnish the image of such a glorious and prospective civilization in front of the world to who we present ourselves as a nation where “Unity in Diversity” exists.
The problems of a caste-based feudal framework that crept into the Indian social structure that existed since earlier times, and which assumed more dangerous proportions in the medieval ages, has also left our society fractured. This mindset is still prevalent in all Indian states, specially the states like Uttar Pradesh, Bihar etc., and even states like Tamil Nadu in the South. Reservation for lower castes is one issue, where politicians have made every effort to pursue their own filthy political interests rather than trying to solve the issue. This age-old mindset has to be done away with, if we desire to put Indian first, and fit the credentials of being the largest democracy in the world. People in India still vote putting casteist interests before national interests.
On the other hand, the slave mentality seems to be ingrained in our very system that is direct fallout of a thousand years of serfdom to intruders, who either plundered or reigned in Indian Territory. There is a lack of participatory democracy, in the sense that we always wait for development to come from a handful of leaders, rather than participating selflessly in the democratic process. Indians, after Independence, sometimes appear to be more aware of their rights than their duties. Again, the development paradigm has also undergone a shift in the sense that everything that is Western is deemed better and fashionable, and Western ideas, as solution to unique problems of the Indian nation, are taken for granted.
India, the land of the martyrs who have embraced the gallows for their ideals, where every drop in the freedom fighter’s blood has fought not for itself but for the nation, has today become indigent instead of indigenous of ‘patriotism’. Patriotism in India needs to be revived and redefined.
We all probably remember patriotism when there is an Indo-Pak cricket match. But we definitely forget it when we cast our vote in the elections, when a week long hungry beggar asks for a rupee, when we shamelessly throw garbage on the roads and yet so many times more. Patriotism is observed as nothing else than the ‘pain on the prick of a pin’. It is rather believed to be a formality, a formality of saluting the national flag and 52 seconds of freeze stature during the national anthem. May be even a frozen heart with no gratitude for the martyrs because of whom we are living off so well.
Putting India first means persuasion of small things and actions with a notion of doing good to other countrymen. India is what Indians are, and what we make of our motherland. In the present world, strengthening of India’s social structure is very essential to thwart any attempts by external elements to destabilize the equilibrium of India. We should realize that “Unity is Strength”. It would be unfair to say that Indians do not have any patriotic feelings. During Kargil War, the entire nation stood as a whole to support our jawans who laid down their lives, defending every inch of Indian Territory. Why should always wait for another attack on Parliament or another Kasab to arise the patriotism in us? Can we not strengthen ourselves for the sake of our motherland? It is not as if the picture is bleak. There is a silver lining in the cloud. The same nation, where riots broke out post 1992 Babri demolition, accepted the judgement on Ayodhya peacefully. The country now needs a move-on, but keeping in mind our unique identity, philosophy, and self-dependence. Total peace and prosperity is however a misnomer. Still, we need to invigorate ourselves, and incessantly strive towards peace and prosperity of the nation. Only by putting national interests ahead of our self-interest and differences that exist among ourselves, can we fulfill the dream of the living legend, Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam of living in a developed India by 2020.As Abraham Lincoln said, “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.”

Monday 8 December 2014

7 deadliest crimes in Engineering Colleges

#1:: Coz you won' be spared on your Day!!







#2:: This can literally get you chocked to death






#3:: They literally know the Theory of Everything!!





#4:: You don't realize this until your final year!!






#5:: And then this makes you feel good about the bitter truth of #4





#6:: Be it Ganesh Chaturthi or College Rock Fest. You just need an excuse to get high!





#7:: You will surely be outlawed for this


If you manage to get away with these you had the most amazing moments, But if you are guilty of  any of these, you had the most amazing experiences. Hope you understand that!!





Tuesday 18 November 2014

Amar Nizor Startup!




I literally believe only thing that is left in "Earth" without "Art" is "Eh....". As Angel Haze rightly says , "The true artistic expression lies in conveying emotions", art and expression go hand in hand. There was an Era where art was appreciated, but today is the era where art is marketed, bargained and sold out. 
Every dream needs a canvas, for Beethoven the canvas was silence, for Shakespeare it was the stage and for Maharnav Gogoi and team from Guwahati,  it's their plain blank Tee shirts, where they narrate stories. The busy G.S Road, Guwahati is the habitat of these artistic goons. Currently a part of three independent startups, they are our very own creative krantikaris whose story deserves to be told and heard.


Maharnav, has he introduces himself, is a serial entrepreneur, a top-notch quizzer and a friend to almost everyone he comes across!! Joining him is his College junior Jayanta, and together they created NEway Ventures. NEway ventures has three subsidiaries, Poptales, SevenTales and Get your ID.

Poptales ( www.poptales.in)  grew in very much line of a Online store which dealt in Caricatured Tees . They took it a step forward to open out retail outlets for the same. Though Poptales was not a new concept in India, their Marketing strategies nailed it, making them a forerunner in North-East India's T-shirt business. Seeing the rising demand of Folk centric  attire, they intelligently launched SevenTales, a whole new brand specially designed  to cater the market of North-East folk endorsed Caricatured Tees.  They started operating both offline (With Store outlets) and online (through E-commerce) and within a year Poptales & SevenTales managed to make a stark appeal to  it "100% POP-CULTURE" Fans. From the house of NEways also come out Get Your Id, which deals in bulk customized merchandise.  

In a age where North-East is facing Individuality crisis in Pan India, these artistic goons are giving us chance to celebrate our individuality. Guwahati is definitely not a start-up friendly city, but their steps is definitely turning. They have understood the rule of the game, Bigger the Challenges, Better is the opportunity. 








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Celebrate the Creative Revolution with The Creative Krantikari!!


Monday 17 November 2014

The Poetess with a Guitar....


She came, she played and she won our hearts. Our Lady is unrestricted, fearless, passionate and a mistress of small strings. Musicians are the smartest creature alive, and when you see someone like Arabhy Surendran, you really believe it. In a short period of Joining the legend Baiju Dharmajan in his alternate project, she has evolved herself to a poet with her fingers rhyming themselves with the guitar creating magic. 

Success doesn't come to wannabes. The instance of people, citing  Indian Education (Specially Engineering) to be a big deterrent to creativity has been recited numerous times. But this girl proves it all wrong. With her "cut the crap & go get it" attitude she is an inspiration for all. Her story is totally that of a Motivational Bollywood drama 

Her childhood was as normal as ours, with big dreams to conquer the universe , to be an Aerospace engineer, to be  a rockstar on stage. Just dreams of normal kid. But what individualized her was that she was a performer. You see rare examples of people who actually accomplished their childhood dreams. Arabhy is one of this rarest kind who did it all right. 

"I always wanted to perform for massive crowds.. and I always wanted to become an aerospace engineer. I made these 2 choices from the start. No going back in either. Since 10 years old I've been dreaming of both" says Arabhy, when asked about her childhood aspirations. A average grade, with 4 placement offers will be a dream run for any engineering grad, but not her. She chose to fulfill her creative appetite and rejected her job offers. She is now pursuing her Masters , so that she can develop herself in Aerodynamics design and also joined Baiju Dharmajan Syndicate to live her dreams. She actually teaches us the values of being focused and hardworking. 

"Arabhy" her name, literally implies to a Raga, a Emotion associated is devotion(Not that she has anything to do with it). Her music journey began very much for the love of Marlin Manson. The abstract music of GnR, Pantera, Megadeth, Sum41,and specially Pink Floyd (Yeah!! she is a Floyd fan too) managed to influence her at a very early age. Her 1st stage performance was when she was 8th garder and that too a guitar solo.   But the most interesting part remains, she is a self-taught guitarist. Yes, you read that right!! This ardent instrumentalist learned all the guitar she knows by herself. 



"Well parents always against this. I keep them at bay because I'm studying too. Crisis was mainly either insults or over praising because of my gender. And getting along with people in general because of tastes. My friends are not fans of metal or rock . More like disco heads. So we keep fighting all the time . You know how defensive we get when someone calls metal noise." she continues her narration with that undying zeal in her.

"Log kya kahenge" , "fitting into Society" , "Parent's complains" blah blah blah... these excuses ain't for her, as she is braving almost anything, but not compromising her passions.

When asked about the reason for her inclination towards Rock, she replies "Well we are very averse to rules and regulations. And the majority of people who are on the scene are youngsters. Rebellion is in everyone's head . Let it be for the right or wrong. rock kinda fuels this. A carefree state of being at all times. Rock was a revolution and a culture because it set everyone free." Now that is something arguable.

So what should a engineer do to be successful, to be known, to be self-satisfied?

Arabhy has got a simple answer " Do Whatever floats your boat"








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Saturday 25 October 2014

It's a Shame but it's the Last || Into the last release of Pink Floyd





The final tunes of this great artwork were given the final shape in The Royal Albert Hall where Gilmour and Mason returned to series of ambient, lyricless recordings from the same period as Pink Floyd's last album, 1994's 'The Division Bell,' to complete 'The Endless River.'Pink Floyd has confirmed the release of its 15th studio album, ‘The Endless River,’ due on November 10. The project, which finds David Gilmour and Nick Mason completing work on previously unreleased sessions with the late Rick Wright, will be co-produced by Phil Manzanera, Youth and Andy Jackson. 

The Endless River was first mentioned in High Hopes of The Division bell "The dawn mist glowing/The water flowing/The endless river/Forever and ever" AS David Gilmour says"The Endless River is a continuous flow of music that builds gradually over four separate pieces over the 55-odd minutes. There’s a sort of continuum from the Division Bell album to this, and the last phrase but one on The Division Bell is 'the endless river' "

The only concept of The endless river according to Gilmoour is, He playing together with Rick Wrights and Nick Mason, the same way that things worked in past, and the way that is familiar to us.The band being covered with redundant hassle for long, couldnot part themselves from releasing The Endless river, which may be the last works of Rick Wrights, before his demice. there was a bond that connected them which is above all the hysteria revolving with Pink floyed post Division Bell. 
It is very evedient form the fact that The absence of Rick is always mentioned by all the band players, including former band member, Roger waters. 

Mason on an interview with says, "I think Rick would be thrilled actually. I think this record is rather a good way of recognizing a lot of what he does. I think the most significant element was really actually hearing what Rick did, because, having lost Rick, it was that thing of… it really brought home what a special player he was."

The title of the album is also intended to partly represent Pink Floyd’s enduring creativity.
The way in which the band take an idea, before “extending it, exploring it and doing something that’s slightly outside the normal pop song, pop industry length of song piece or whatever,” says Nick Mason.

Polly Samson, spouse of the Band lead Gutarist David Gilmour gave the lyrics of The most celebrated song from the new Album "Louder Than Words" premiered on U.K. radio Thursday.  
The opening notes goes  – ringing church bells – recall the closing sounds from The Division Bell's "High Hopes." "We bitch and we fight / Diss each other on sight / But this thing we do," Gilmour sings over a rhythm reminiscent of a more upbeat "Hey You," his voice seemingly unchanged from 1994."With world weary grace / We’ve taken our places / We could curse it or nurse it or give it a name / Louder than words/ this thing that we do," sings the group. Around the 3:30 mark, we will have Gilmour launches into one of his trademark Pink Floyd guitar solos, possibly for the last time.

"This is one of the pieces of music that seemed fairly complete as an idea for a song, and Polly came up with the idea for 'Louder Than Words' as something that describes what we achieve when we make the music that we make," Gilmour continued in interview with RS. 
"Neither Rick nor I are the most verbal people and so Polly was thinking it was very appropriate for us to express what we do through the music, but she’s helping us describe it in words as well."The Endless River also features contributions from physicist Stephen Hawking, whose "voice" appears on the track "Talkin' Hawkin'" two decades after he graced Division Bell's "Keep Talkin'," as well as songwriters Anthony Moore and Samson. 

David Gilmour on a final statement conveys that: 'It's a Shame, but This Is the End'"I think we have successfully commandeered the best of what there is," says longtime member. "I suspect this is it". On other occasion The singer-songwriter has issued a note on Facebook to remind his fans 
that, while Pink Floyd are indeed issuing their first record in 20 years – the instrumental record The Endless River – he had no role in making it. 

Being the greatest musical author of Humankind, the narrative of Pink Floyd didn't deserve its closure in such a poignant way. I feel pain to see it all end.




Reference: The Rolling Stone, The Ultimate Classic Rock

Thursday 23 October 2014

What made Candy Crush addictive!!

Ask Candy Crush Saga critics why the game is so popular and makes so much money, and you'll get a range of answers. At the more thoughtful end of the spectrum, they'll admit that the game is very polished and accessible, while pointing to its sophisticated psychological string-tugging to get people hooked, and paying.The more splenetic critics focus in on the latter point, often boiling it down to the suggestion that people who play Candy Crush Saga are stupid, easily-manipulated sheep who wouldn't know a proper game if it bit them on the nose.
I've had this conversation a lot over the last year, often with otherwise-reasonable people who are usually more than capable of accepting that not everyone likes the same games as them. There's something about Candy Crush Saga's success that is rubbing away at a raw nerve for many gamers. Really, though, if you want to find out why Candy Crush Saga is so popular and makes so much money, you should ask the other people: the ones actually playing it. Mums and dads, aunts and uncles. Grandparents, even. Housewives and househusbands. Commuters from office juniors through to CEOs.
Your non-gamer friends, especially. Even if you're not quite as aware of how much they're playing Candy Crush Saga and similar games since you figured out how to turn off their Facebook alerts begging for help. Candy Crush Saga's audience isn't just huge: it's hugely mainstream.
That, to me, is hardcore gaming. It's also a sign of the new audience that games like Candy Crush Saga have created on smartphones and tablets. They're not stupid: they just want to play games that are accessible, very polished, playable in short sessions, and which make their friends a factor without it being real-time multiplayer. 
These are the reasons why Candy Crush Saga is so popular, along with some bold marketing tactics that saw King early into Facebook's mobile app ads, while also taking a high-profile punt on TV advertising.
Candy Crush Saga will continue to be a divisive game – and it's a fact that discussion of the game and its publisher online tends to be dominated by the haters – but it's not those people who King will be worrying about following its lucrative IPO.
The key to the company's future will be understanding what its current and future players want from games, including responding quickly if they start to show ennui with candies and Sagas.
King will have a lot of money to throw at that problem, but in the fast-evolving world of mobile social gaming, that won't be the only thing determining the company's future success.

NaMo's Diwali greetings will surely prove he is our most innovative PM

The Creative Krantikari Wishes You a happy Diwali, Glowing with Peace and Prosperity.


Relationships are built by greetings. So, I was online searching for Diwali E-Greetings which can be forwarded to my self-evident and obvious kins.

My exploration landed me to a very interesting Link:: Narendra Modiji's Online Diwali Greetings. I was simply amazed of the way our PM designed this.

So here I am wishing all my viewers, in very MoDified way.




On another occasion our President convey's his wish to the countrymen, Saying "Diwali is a harbinger of joy and happiness. It celebrates the victory of good over evil, knowledge over ignorance and light over darkness. It is also an occasion for strengthening bonds of friendship and goodwill between people of all communities and religions. 

May this years celebrations dispel the darkness of ignorance and bring the light of happiness for those who are less privileged. 

Let us celebrate this festival by reaffirming faith in all that is good, noble and virtuous and instilling in ourselves pride in the composite culture of India. Let us do everything possible to make this years Diwali celebrations pollution free and environmentally safe.







Friday 17 October 2014

India's First Rock Act :: Mohiner Ghoraguli




I just spent the entire week of my Mid Term in effort to apprentice several Topsy-turvy equations of motions, ten hours a day while listening in loop to the Unsung Horses of Indian Rock scene — Mohiner Ghoraguli. Yes, the famous "Bheegi Bheegi" from Gangstar was originally composed by the Ghoras in 1980s, 20 years before its latest version.
The essence of counter culture revolution mixed with the Indian folk acts, made me operative in the openness of the life. 
While all of us go gaga over international musical artists and groups, we tend to forget the immensely talented ones closer 
to our soil.Mohiner Ghoraguli (translated as Mohin's Horses) is surely one of those musical groups that had heralded a new beginning in Bengali music by breaking all established musical themes. For ardent music lovers, this name would definitely not be a new one. Mohiner Ghoraguli was an independent( in fact the fist) rock music group of Calcutta that was established in the 1970s.

During a period of stagnation in Bangla music, when commercial film songs were the dominant market force, the lyrics (and to some extent the compositions) of leader Gautam Chattopadhyay were radically new. The personal yet social nature of their act, were a reminiscence to the urban folk movement led by Bob Dylan, John Denver in the 60s. Though they were almost unknown in their time, in recent years they have undergone a critical re-evaluation much like the Velvet Underground. Without any exaggeration it can be said that the Group was decades ahead of its times. The then milieu could not grasp the mettle of Mohiner Ghoraguli

In such a conservative climate, Moheener Ghoraguli, with its unorthodox musical compositions and strange choice of song themes, failed to gain much of a fan base. Its songs dealt with everyday topics -politics, poverty, injustice, revolution, love, loneliness, even begging and prostitution, unlike the mainstream romantic theme. Gautam Chattopadhyay had strong political beliefs; in common with many intelligent and idealistic young men of his generation, he was involved in socialist/communist politics during the 1960s and 1970s. According to former bandmate Abraham Mazumdar, Gautam may have been involved in the Naxalite movement as well (Citation Needed). This political outlook was reflected in the musical output of the band.


The 1970s were the heydays of classic Bengali singers like Shyamal Mitra and Hemanta Mukhopadhyay. At that time the Group could not achieve what it deserved. The maverick Group did not get much prominence as the songs were not only about love; the songs dealt with mundane topics such as politics, poverty, technology and even prostitution. Many say that the Group's songs had the elements of Jibonmukhi Gaan (songs of ordinary life) that became famous two decades later thanks to the likes of Kabir Suman. In recognition of this renewed interest, Gautam released a compilation of Mohiner Ghoraguli covers by contemporary artists, Aabaar Bochhor Kuri Pore in 1995. They have since come to be considered an unrecognized pioneers of the jibonmukhi style and ethics, decades ahead of their times.

The Horses of Mohin have stood the test of time and galloped across the hearts of millions, symbolising to be forefront of Bangla political and social dynamics of that era. The present must recall the temperament of the chords which were played to define a new revolution, a new Jibon. In times when technology exemplify our music needs, where people are plugged in ears and get aloof from each other and cut off from music. We should try and look towards the Horses and learn the  gallop towards the estuaries of life. 







Acknowledgements:

Mr. Tameem Salman Choudhury, to introducing me to the Ghoras.
To wikipedia, for making , facts easily available, so that wannabes like me can write.

Friday 10 October 2014

The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn


Legends narrate that, lysergic prophet Timothy Leary used to dose the drinks at parties with LSD, but it might not have been necessary. The radical cultural shift of 1960s already made recreational Drugs a symbol of Taboo. By 1967, year of the Summer of Love, the free spirited bohemians made their a valiant bid to supplant the dominant culture, and in retrospect a strong case can be made that the counter-culture won. Like  enclave of San Fransisco , the whole USA, Canada and Europe became even more of a melting pot of politics, drugs, music, creativity, and the total lack of sexual and social inhibition than it already was.

The symbolic forefront of the insurrection in Britain were acts like Pink Floyd, till the the paraphernalia of the Under Ground music. Their musical  psychedelic drugs was a toast to Paul McCartney's journey to the zenith, but they never claimed to be recognised as the harbinger of the revolution. The cornered psychotropic musicians,   became the leaders to their fellow traveler with their ravishing debut  The Pipers at the gates of dawn. The world got a sonic, kaleidoscopic sound that echoed through the brain and heart of silence society. 

Piper was recorded at Abbey Road at the same time the Beatles were there recording Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, but the results couldn't have been more at odds with one another. Where the Beatles exerted complete control over the tools of the studio, Pink Floyd used the studio to lose control. It didn't hurt that the band's primary songwriter and visionary Syd Barrett was on the verge of permanently losing control himself. Less than a year after the release of Piper, in 1967, Barrett was out of the band, one of the most prominent and tragic casualties of the rock era. Of course, while Barrett lived out the remainder of his life as one of the psychedelic age's walking wounded, Pink Floyd went on to much bigger (if not necessarily) better things.

The first side opens with the outer space chatter of a thousand space missions intoning the names of the stars and we’re plunged in to a prime slice of mid-sixties freak-out territory. Syd’s guitar is fabulously lithe. There follows a series of tales of cats, silver shoes, unicorns, mice called Gerald, bikes, gnomes, scarecows and the I Ching. Sounds horrible, doesn’t it? But in 1967 this was fresh and new, and what’s more it’s delivered utterly charmingly and with no hint of received American pronunciation merely to be cool. It’s been said before, but this is Edward Lear for the acid generation.

Then in the black hole between these tracks we get Syd’s other side, the shining, blasted sci fi tones of his guitar rumbling through the extended work out of “Interstellar Overdrive”. 

This is the paradox with Barrett. He could seemingly write material that was both poppy and deeply out there with ease. Who knows how the Floyd would have sounded had he held on. Definitely different that’s for sure. But Piper remains a testament to a mind that, for a brief spell, saw no boundaries…

Tuesday 7 October 2014

Dreams have meaning


When they were recalled after awakening they were regarded as either the friendly or hostile manifestation of some higher powers, demoniacal and Divine. With the rise of scientific thought the whole of this expressive mythology was transferred to psychology; to-day there is but a small minority among educated persons who doubt that the dream is the dreamer's own psychical
act.

But since the downfall of the mythological hypothesis an interpretation of the dream has been wanting. The conditions of its origin; its relationship to our psychical life when we are awake; its independence of disturbances which, during the state of sleep, seem to compel notice; its many peculiarities repugnant to our waking thought; the incongruence between its images and the feelings they engender; then the dream's evanescence, the way in which, on awakening, our thoughts thrust it
aside as something bizarre, and our reminiscences mutilating or rejecting it—all these and many other problems have for many hundred years demanded answers which up till now could never have been satisfactory.

In striking contradiction with this the majority of medical writers hardly admit that the dream is a psychical phenomenon at all. According to them dreams are provoked and initiated exclusively by stimuli proceeding from the senses or the body, which either reach the sleeper from without or are accidental disturbances of his internal organs. The dream has no greater claim to meaning and importance than the sound called forth by the ten fingers of a person quite unacquainted with music running his fingers over the keys of an instrument. The dream is to be regarded, says Binz, "as a physical process always useless, frequently morbid." All the peculiarities of dream life are explicable as the incoherent effort, due to some physiological stimulus, of certain organs, or of the cortical
elements of a brain otherwise asleep.

The conclusion which is now forced upon me is that the dream is a sort of substitution for those emotional and intellectual trains of thought which I attained after complete analysis. I do not yet know the process by which the dream arose from those thoughts, but I perceive that it is wrong to regard the dream as psychically unimportant, a purely physical process which has arisen from the activity of isolated cortical elements awakened out of sleep.

I must further remark that the dream is far shorter than the thoughts which I hold it replaces; whilst analysis discovered that the dream was provoked by an unimportant occurrence the evening before the dream.




Source:: Psychology Today. Dream Psychology- Sigmund Freud. 

Sunday 28 September 2014

The idea matters, not revolution....



A revolutionary dies, but the revolution remains as an idea rooted deep inside the dynamics of our daily society. The words of Lenin goes like this, “ Man does not live by politics alone”.  The maturity of human being is itself the biggest bane to human society.  A society can never be flat. Divisions and hierarchy, is the sole functional aspect and the base of any utilitarian organisation. Great people have scripted history trying to modify it by transferring the authority of the society (which is synonymous to a organisation) to the masses. Their efforts resulted in a more sophisticated structure, on which the modern day world is working. As I stated earlier, division ad hierarchy cannot be eliminated from the society, but the efforts of few great men have idealized the concepts of a perfectly flat society, where the driving force for change is not constrained to any individual.  

60 years long independence is just a small time for a country as diverse as India to be as developed as it is today. The preamble says, India is a socialist, secular, democratic republic, and we proudly live by it. The progress of India was scripted by some legendary individuals, whose ideas and values framed the foundation and the mindset of modern day Indians. In a Gandhi- Nehru dominated history; we tend to overlook some of the significant persons behind the socialist framework of Indian constitution.









The sanctity of law is maintained as long as it is the expression of the will of the people”- Bhagat Singh. One key factor of socialist constitution is abolishment of totalitarian laws, which many visionary, mainly Bhagat Singh stood for. Bhagat Singh was one of the foremost socialist thinkers of the country—someone who argued that the country’s independence from the British rule would be truly effective if and when the issues of class struggle are taken care of. In the short life that he lived, Bhagat Singh transformed himself from an action-oriented teenage revolutionary to a rational, socialist and democratic thinker with an egalitarian view of society.



In fact, in his last message from jail dated March 3, 1931, he said, “…the struggle in India would continue so long as a handful of exploiters go on exploiting the labour of the common people for their own ends. It matters little whether these exploiters are purely British capitalists, or British and Indians in alliance, or even purely Indians.”

“The story of a 23 years old youth, portrayed as a macho revolutionary (in motion picture and social media), sacrificing his life for the sake of mother-land” , is heard over and over again. But the real ideas of Bhagat Singh are yet to be truly understood by India.

At a time when a Hindu-right government rules the country, Maoist movements are widespread, and social inequality rules the roost, a detailed study of Bhagat Singh’s egalitarian ideologies, anti-communal stand and his indomitable fight to remove inequality might hold the key for better times. 








Source: The Hindustan Times, www.shahidbhagatsingh.org