The Bombay Royale
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The Bombay Royale

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Enter The Bombay Royale, a local 11-piece musical powerhouse who have taken the themes and soundtracks from these films and have infused them with all the colour, production and energy one would expect from a four-plus hour Bollywood movie. The Bombay Royale had first set down to do strictly covers from the gilded ‘60s era of Bollywood, but soon evolved into writing their own material. Their debut album, You Me Bullets Love, was released just last month – and it is a corker.

Parvyn Singh, one of the two singers in this bombastic Bollywood/surf/psychedelic band, was on hand recently to speak with us about the band, the album and the awe-inspiring madness of Bollywood films in general. But first, we must learn how to do the Bollywood dance.

“People say, ‘Oh, I don’t know how to do the Bollywood dance,’” Singh laughs, “but it’s very easy! You put your hands in the air and pretend you’re screwing in a light bulb! That’s what it’s about!”

The Bombay Royale was founded by Andy Williamson, a saxophonist and Bollywood aficionado who was driven by the fact that no one in Melbourne seemed to be performing that type of music live. “[Williamson]’s always had a great interest in that style of music,” Singh reveals. “He sat down and scored some great cover tunes from the ‘60s era, and got some great people together – it started as an instrumental thing, but when it was coming together, they put the feelers out for a singer, and then my name came up, cause I’ve been performing with my dad since I was really young.

“I went down and saw these guys, there were in a tiny studio in the Hope Street Warehouse in Brunswick where we did our initial rehearsals. So there I was in this tiny room with all these white guys, and they were doing all these songs from my childhood, like I grew up with all this stuff!” Singh laughs loudly at the recollection. “I started singing and we found Shourov [Bhattacharya, the male singer] later and it all came together and – voila! – here we are!”

One aspect of The Bombay Royale one may notice right off the bat – besides the fact that there are 11 of them onstage – is that they don’t just play music. Hell, these cats are so much more than that – they put on a full-blown stage production, complete with intensely intricate orchestrations, secret agents, plot twists and bandit masks. How the hell, I ask, do they keep things so organised? The secret, Singh tells me, is everyone knowing his or her place in the band. “We’ve got all the characters that really help us maintain that personae as a full group, so with the band you have The Skipper, who’s Andy, the leader of ‘the bad guys;’ he’s the leader of this big gang of thugs, which is all the musicians, and so we have The Jewel Thief [Josh Bennett, guitar and sitar] and The Railway Mogul [Tom Martin, guitar] and The Kung-Fu Dentist [Ros Jones, trombones] – and so he’s in charge of them!” she gushes.

“Shourov and I are the secret agents – we’ve got this whole backstory that we present onstage, and so throughout our performance and throughout our songs there’s always the characters in the back of our minds. It really helps create tension and the right vibe, and the orchestration is really rehearsed, and we make sure we know who’s meant to be doing what when!”

What’s important to Singh and the band is showcasing brilliant music from incredible musicians. “[The musicians] feel it really well. At the moment, what we’re doing is we’re able to see the individual talent of all the musicians who are in the band; it’s slowly coming out and every once in a while you will get a great keyboard solo or guitar solo or horn solo. As we go along, I think the story’s developing, and the characters will have leading roles to play. So it’s really like this never-ending movie that we’re creating within the band!”

Which prompts this scribe’s next question – are they planning on creating their very own Bollywood movie? “That’s definitely something we would love to do!” she exclaims. “Obviously we need the budget and the right people who would get behind it. There’s some talk about a film director in the UK who would love to work with us, and a couple members of the band are really into script-writing, so there’s so much possibility with the band, which is exciting! But slow and steady I think!

Now that You Me Bullets Love has been released to glowing reviews, it’s high time for The Bombay Royale to celebrate its release with an album launch at The Hi-Fi. What can the punters expect? Singh promises that it’s going to be huge. “It’s a cinematic experience, so we’ve got two big screens on the side of the stage, and we’ve got a film guy who’d going to do some video footage of Bollywood movie scenes, superimposing Bombay Royale footage into it and doing all this really cool video art as well; it’s going to be an overload in every sense possible!”

Hell, just listening to her describe it makes me excited. “I’m getting more and more excited the more I think about it, too!” she laughs.

BY THOMAS BAILEY