Carnatic music, colours, jazz concerts taking place Feb. and March 2016

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Holi

SATURDAY, FEB. 27

Event: Concert
Details: Toronto based Justin Gray, a bassist and composer trained in Hindustani music and his band SYNTHESIS, which is a fusion of Hindustani music and jazz music comprising of Gray (Bass Veena), Ravi Naimpally (table) and Ted Quinlan (guitar) will perform at the Toronto Centre for the Arts, 5040 Yonge St. in North York at 8 p.m. Jazz Performance and Education Centre (JPEC) is the host.
Contact: For more information/tickets, visit here

Event: Dance-a-thon
Details: Pure Soul Energy will be participating in a fundraiser to benefit Syrian refugees with a Bollywood dance-a-thon. The event is taking place at Discovery Community Christian Church, 7755 Tenth Line W. Mississauga from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Contact: Here

Event: Man Mor Bani Thangat Kare
Details: Swargunjan Music Academy is presenting a concert, featuring vocalist Pramesh Nandi of Mewati Gharana at Don Bosco Catholic Secondary School, 2 Saint Andrews Blvd. Etobicoke at 6:30 p.m. onward.
Contact: For tickets, contact here

SATURDAY, MARCH 5

Event: Night in Mumbai Gala
Details: The gala to benefit Heart House Hospice will recreate the energy of Mumbai. It’s taking place at Mississauga Convention Centre, 75 Derry Rd. W. and will start at 6 p.m.
Contact: For more, contact here

SATURDAY, MARCH 12

Event: Holi 2016
Details: Zoom Enjoyment Inc. is presenting Holi 2016 at the Rose Garden Banquet Hall, 6628 Finch Ave. W. Etobicoke at 7 p.m.
Contact: Sanjiv Arora, 416-986-1204

THRUSDAY, March 17 to 20

Event: Kartein hain 100 years of magic
Details: More than 50 of your favourite Disney characters will share the rink this March break when Disney on Ice stops by Rogers Centre.
Contact: For tickets, contact here

SUNDAY, MARCH 20

Event: Rang Barse 2016
Details: The KC Group of Canada will celebrate Holi at the National Banquet Halls, 7355 Torbram Rd. Mississauga at 11 a.m.
Contact: Here

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23

Event: Dance Diaries
Details: Sanskriti Arts Ensemble (SAE) and Imagebuilderz, a marketing and PR firm are bringing Saroj Khan, renowned Bollywood choreographer to Toronto. Khan will host a three-day workshop here. The half-day or full-day workshops will take place at Sanskriti Arts Dance and Fitness Studios at 2249 Dunwin Dr. in Mississauga.
Contact: Here

SATURDAY, MARCH 26

Event: Swaragini
Details: A Carnatic Music Idol contest will take place at the Cyril Clark Library (Theatre), 20 Loafers Lake Ln. Brampton. The contest is for participants in three age groups: 7-12 years old, 12-17 and adults 18 and above.
Contact: Here

Event: Kaifi Aur Mein
Details: Universal Promotions and Eglinton Carpets are bringing a theatrical production that’s an ode to poet Kaifi Azmi. At the event Bollywood actor Shabana Azmi and her husband/well-known lyricist Javed Akhtar, will take the audience through a personal journey by enacting the letters Kaifi Azmi (Shabana’s dad) wrote to her mom Shaukat. Ghazal singer Jaswinder Singh will sing a few of Kaifi Azmi’s ghazals.The show is taking place at The Meeting House, 2700 Bristol Circ. Oakville at 7 p.m.
Contact: For tickets, contact here

Note: Want your event featured in Toronto Desi Diaries? Submit details at least a month in advance. Send your listings to: Toronto.desidiaries@gmail.com.

 

Let the records show, Toronto sure knows how to make a noise for Diwali

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Nrithyakshetra Dance Academy

Dancers from Nrithyakshetra Dance Academy are among those that will be part in the Diwali festival celebrations at the Living Arts Centre in Mississauga. Deewa, the Festival of Lights is hosted by Maple Diversity Foundation, Nov. 14.

Here’s a list of desi events happening in and around Toronto, November, 2015

Friday, Nov. 6sacred sounds
Event: Sacred sounds of Ancient India
Details: Prof. Surinder Singh, founder of Raj Academy, and students of the school are promising the audience a spectacular journey through time with soulful acoustic sounds from traditional Indian Instruments. Concert is taking place at Lester B. Pearson Theatre, 150 Central Park Dr. Brampton from 7-9 p.m.
Contact: Karanjeet Singh, 416-899-0843 or email: karanjeet@rajacademy.com.

Friday, Nov. 6 to Sunday, Nov. 8
BCC DiwaliFestEvent: Canada Dry DiwaliFest
Details: Stop by the Bramalea City Centre, 25 Peel Centre Dr. for exciting live performances, a dance competition, a glamorous fashion show, family friendly activities, mascots, photo booth, free samples giveaways and a chance to win fabulous prizes from our festival lucky draw.
Contact: Here

Saturday, Nov. 7Bihar-Diaries-Poster-1
Event: Bihar Diaries – A Tale of Lies
Details: PGI International and Yaar Entertainment are hosting a play Bihar Diaries, a slice-of-life story about the dysfunctional folks including the fictional mayor of Bihar, his daughter Baby and wife Jalebi. Directed by Vaibhav Parashar, the play will unfold at Michael Power St. Joseph School, 105 Eringate Dr. Etobicoke. Show starts at 3 p.m. Tickets cost $15/person.
Contact: For tickets and other information, contact here.

Saturday, Nov. 14
Arjun sunset photo IMG_6566ARJUN2015Event: Deewa – The Festival of Lights
Details: Maple Diversity Foundation, a Mississauga not-for-profit, will host award-winning R&B artist Arjun from U.K. who’s headlining the festival, Saturday, Nov. 14 at the Living Arts Centre from 1 p.m. onwards.
The day-long event has plenty of activities for the whole family, a fashion show by Satya Paul Canada, performances by Sanskriti Arts & Entertainment and more
Contact: Here

Saturday, Nov. 14
Event: Mha PujaMha Puja
Details: Nepalis from the GTA are coming together to celebrate Mha Puja and Nepal Sambat (New Year). Mha Puja is a cultural event of purification, strengthening and understanding of oneself, and man’s relationship with nature and cosmos. The event by Canadian New Guthi will take place at Brampton Tower Hall, 85 Charolais Blvd. Brampton from 4:30 p.m. onwards. Cost of admission is $25/person (adults) and $15/person (Children 12 and below and seniors).
Contact: Bimal Man Shrestha, 416-705-6672

Wednesday, Nov. 18
nirbhayaEvent: Nirbhaya (play)
Details: Based on the horrific event Dec. 16. 2012 when a medical student was brutally raped and killed, Nirbhaya became a catchphrase in India and elsewhere. Montreal-based writer and director Yaël Farbe and Nightwood Theatre are bringing a riveting play adapted from the real-life events. Play runs from Nov. 18- 29 at the Harbourfront Centre, 235 Queens Quay W. Toronto and stars Priyanka Bose, Poorna Jagannathan, Sneha Jawale, Rukhsar Kabir, Japjit Kaur, Pamela Mala Sinha and Ankur Vikal.
Contact: For tickets, contact here.

Thursday, Nov. 26
Event: Spirit of IndiaSpirit-of-India-Web
Details: Rahis Bharti and the Bollywood Masala Orchestra and Dancers of India invite you on a lively musical journey from Rajasthan to Mumbai. Spirit of India, a musical will happen at The Rose Theatre, 1 Theatre Ln. Brampton at 8 p.m.
Contact: For tickets, contact here.

 

Oct. ’15 brings Krishna, the musical, garba, garba and more garbaa

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Malayali film actress Shobana is bringing a visual treat Krishna, a musical to Oakville, Sunday, Oct. 4. Check out other desi events happening in the GTA, October 2015.

filmi21Thursday, Oct. 1

Event: Filmi Toronto
Details: FILMI is an annual Toronto film festival that showcases the best in South Asian cinema from Canada and the rest of the world. This year, the festival will celebrate its 16th anniversary with a full schedule of screenings and industry workshops from Oct. 1 – 4.
Contact: For listings, schedule and more, contact here.

Garba-dance3Saturday, Oct. 3
Event: Dandiya Raas Garba
Details: Sur Prem Entertainers are bringing a dandiya event to Brampton Soccer Centre, 1495 Sandalwood Pkwy. E. at 7:30 p.m.
Contact: For tickets contact here.

Event: Hindustani Classical MusicKomkali
Details: Raag-Mala Music Society of Toronto and the Centre for South Asian Civilizations UTM are hosting Bhuvanesh Komkali at 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3 at the MiST Theatre, U of T Mississauga Campus, 3359 Mississauga Road, Mississauga.
Bhuvanesh a Hindustani classical singer from the Gwalior gharana is the grandson of legendary gayak Kumar Gandharva. He will be accompanied by Sanjay Deshpande (tabla) and Vyasmurti Katti (harmonium). Tickets cost $30/person.
Contact: Here
sargamEvent: Concert
Details: Sadhana Sargam and Jubin Shah will perform at the Armenian Youth Centre, 50 Hallcrown Pl. in North York (Victoria Park and Sheppard) at 6:30 p.m. Event hosted by Toronto Indian Youth Cultural Association (TIYC) Canada.
Contact: 416-998-0582

Sunday, Oct. 4

Event: Shobana’s Krishna12049635_961990323857837_1338590592335995599_n
Details: Blue Sapphire Entertainment Inc. is bringing Krishna, a visual tapestry of dance/drama by Shobana, well-known Malayalam actor/dancer/choreographer. The show will take place at The Meeting House, 2700 Bristol House in Oakville at 6:30 p.m. The English version of Krishna was conceived and created by Shobana after years of rigorous research, and practice. The doe-eyed beauty plays Krishna and will be accompanied by a troupe of 16 artists including her daughter Narayani.
Contact: For tickets visit here of contact here.

Saturday, Oct. 10

Sukvinder_kanikaEvent:  Concert
Details: Sukvinder Singh and Kanika Kapoor, two Bollywood playback singers, whose pipes have been wowing filmgoers, will be performing a concert at the Sony Centre of performing arts, 1 Front St. E. at 6:30 p.m.
Contact: For tickets, visit here.

Sunday, Oct. 11

Event: Raas Garbadandiya sticks
Details: Power of Kirtan will be presenting an interactive Raas Garba with Premash Nandi and group at Harold M. Brathwaite Secondary School, 415 Great Lakes Dr. from 7 p.m. onwards. A free vegetarian meal will be served.
Contact: For tickets and information, visit here.

Saturday, Oct. 17

Event: GarbaDMG garba
Details: Dhamalmasti Group (DMG) is hosting a garba with Gitanajli Group at the Hershey Centre, 5600 Rose Cherry Place, Mississauga at 7 p.m.
Contact: Here.

It’s hot, hot. August turns the heat on desi festivals and shows in Toronto

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Whew! This is quite a line-up of celebrations in August.

The TD Festival of South Asia kicks-off at Little India (1426 Gerrard St. E. Toronto) from 12 noon to 11 p.m. Check out these Desi festivals and concerts in Toronto, August 2015.

The TD Festival of South Asia kicks-off at Little India (1426 Gerrard St. E. Toronto) from 12 noon to 11 p.m. Check out these Desi festivals and concerts in Toronto, August 2015.

Saturday, Aug. 1 and Sunday, Aug. 2
Event: MuslimFestMuslimFest_2015_Flyer-1024x690
Details: August kicks off with the popular MuslimFest, a celebration of Muslim arts, culture, humour, cuisine and more. Festival runs Aug. 1-2 at Celebration Square in Mississauga. Performers include: include Florida’s Yasemin Kanar, aka Yaz, Canadian Writer and Artist Boonaa Mohammed, Hip-hop and R&B trio Native Deen, The band, Joshua Salaam, Abdul-Malik Ahmad and Naeem Muhammad. Stand-up performance by Preacher Moss is also a must-see.
Contact: www.muslimfest.com


Saturday, Aug. 1
-2015-5-26-11-19-42Event: Chaar Laina with Surender Sharma and Sampat Saral
Details: Surrender Sharma was the king of deadpan delivery and master of humour few decades ago. Guess what? He’s performing at The Rose Theatre, 1 Theatre Ln. in Brampton at 5:30 p.m. courtesy, Indo-Canada Arts Council. Tickets cost $20/person and upwards.
Contact: Here

Friday, Aug. 7 and Saturday, Aug. 8
Event: Bollywood Monster MashupBollywood Mashap
Details: The 5th annual Bollywood Monster Mashup is back bigger, better and earlier. Organizer are calling on desis to party at the largest South Asian festival in Canada taking place at where else? Mississauga Celebration Square.
This year features: Bollywood star Jonita Gandhi who’s the headline performer on Friday, August 7. Saturday, Aug. 8 will see the first-ever Canadian performance by Ash King.
According to Artistic Director Vikas Kohli, “This year there will be special Pan American fusion acts, a bigger KidsZone, more singers, musicians, dancers and more interactive Bollywood dance lessons”.
Contact: Here

Saturday, Aug. 8
Viva goaEvent: Viva Goa
Details: The Croatian Recreational Park (Father Kamber), 4525 Mississauga Rd. will come alive with all things Goan as part of World Goa Day. Live entertainment, food and music are on the agenda. Action takes take place from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tickets cost $7/person. Free for children under 12. First 200 guests will get free Chourico Pao.
Contact: http://www.goatoronto.com/

Sunday, Aug. 9
Event: Masala Masti Boat Cruisemasala cruise
Details: Omni Promotions Canada & PGA International Inc. are presenting a Masala Masti Boat Cruise IV: a fun-filled family event. Put your dancing shoes on. Cash bar. Boarding time is 12 noon at 242 Cherry St. in Toronto and cruising will happen from 1-5 p.m. Tickets cost $50/person (adults) and $45/person (for a group of 10).
Contact: Here (http://www.pgaii.com/)

MISAFF15+posterEvent: Dhanak (premiere)
Details: Mosaic: South Asian Film Festival of Mississauga (MISAFF) 15 is presenting Nagesh Kukunoor’s film Dhanak. Premiere will feature a talk with the director. Dhanak is the road adventure of an orphan brother and sister pair in search of their dream to meet Shahrukh Khan. The event is taking place at Cineplex Cinemas, 309 Rathburn Rd. W. in Mississauga at 1 p.m. Cost of tickets is $10/person (adults) and $8/child (under 13).
Contact: Here

Friday, Aug. 14 to Saturday, Aug. 15
Event: TD Mosaic 2015Mosaic
Details: Mosaic, an arts festival, has more than 150 artists in over 16 hours of live stage performances, showcasing well-known local and international artists and super stars. The festival is happening at Celebration Square in Mississauga at 6 p.m.
Contact: Here

Saturday, Aug. 15
TD Festival of SAEvent: TD Festival of South Asia
Details: Considered a unique street festival, celebrations will take place at Little India, 1426 Gerrard St. E. Toronto from 12 noon to 11 p.m. Check out exotic cuisines, live entertainment, fashion show, arts & crafts display, fun family activities and much more.
Contact: Here

 

 

Mark your calendars for music, dance and PM Narendra Modi’s visit

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They say April showers bring May flowers.

I am all for it, as long as it’s not the dreaded white stuff that the blue skies kept dumping on us. No doubt that stuff looks pristine and oh so romantic when a Bollywood starlet is cavorting in a chiffon saree, but trust me, it’s nuisance.

So here you go, enjoy some of these 2015 April events in the Greater Toronto Area.

Saturday, April 4 – 25Naach Meri Jaan

Event: Naach Meri Jaan

Details: Toronto Centre for Arts, 5040 Yonge Street, Toronto, will be pulsating with rhythm and tempo as a dance competition by Glitterati Entertainment and Sanskriti Arts gets underway. Pria Haider and Naved Jaffrey are bringing the dance competition to promote South Asian talent in forms such as Bhangra, Bollywood, Fusion, etc.

Contact: Tickets can be purchased here

Saturday, April 18Ustad Rahat Fateh

Event: Ustad Rahat Fateh Ali (concert)

Details: Hershey Centre, 5500 Rose Cherry Place, will host Ustad Rahat Fateh Ali for a concert kicking-off at 8:30 p.m.

Contact: For tickets and more details, visit here

 

BaisakhiEvent: Baisakhi Bonanza

Details: Dilwale Dilliwale is hosting a celebration of Baisakhi with an evening of music (Geet), Sufi poetry and Ghazals at Sagan Banquet Hall, 7180 Edwards Blvd. Tickets cost $50/person and includes dinner.

Contact: For information and tickets, visit here

 

Wednesday, April 15CORRECTION-JAPAN-INDIA-POLITICS-LAND-FILES

Event: NaMo in Toronto

Details: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be in Toronto, Wednesday, April 15 at the Ricoh Coliseum, 45 Manitoba Dr., Toronto, ON M6K 3C3 at

This is Modi’s first bilateral visit. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Modi are expected to discuss trade and economic ties.

Contact: here

 

Moneet’s plea of Will You Marrow Me? nets her a match

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Moneet Mann, 24, started an awareness campaign Will You Marrow Me? after her cancer diagnosis last year. On Saturday, May, 24 Moneet and officials from the Canadian Blood Services' OneMatch Stem Cell and Marrow Network are hosting a swabbing clinic at the Hershey Centre in Mississauga from 1-6 p.m. Supplied photo

Moneet Mann, 24, started an awareness campaign Will You Marrow Me? after her cancer diagnosis last year. On Saturday, May, 24 Moneet and officials from the Canadian Blood Services’ OneMatch Stem Cell and Marrow Network are hosting a swabbing clinic at the Hershey Centre in Mississauga from 1-6 p.m.
Supplied photo

It was serendipity that led me to meet Moneet Mann, 24, and chronicle her journey.
The tiny stubs of hair on Moneet’s scalp when I met her reminded me of resilient crocuses that push through the earth at the end of winter and are considered harbingers of spring.
So, it came, as no surprise the steely determination in Moneet’s sparkling eyes as she talked about the cancer in her body would find a way to slay the dragon that had somehow intruded on her life and dreams.
Last Thanksgiving, after being handed a cancer diagnosis, a stunned and shocked Moneet underwent treatment at the Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) in Toronto for acute myeloid leukemia, but doctors told her she would need a bone marrow transplant. Unlike blood donors, typically, bone marrow matches, are only found within the same ancestry.
Here’s the thing: even though there are currently some 22 million donors registered worldwide, South Asians make up for a small percentage. Take a good look at the depressing statistics: East Indians constitute a little over 3 per cent of registered donors and are at the bottom alongside blacks (1 per cent), aboriginals (1 per cent) and Hispanics (0.2 per cent).See chart here
So when faced against these odds, Moneet knew she had to take charge. Between cancer treatments and praying for a divine intervention, Moneet kept busy with her awareness campaign Will You Marrow me?
(The catchy title was the brainchild of Moneet’s cousin who one day called her excitedly and said he had the perfect name for her initiative. The rest, as they say, is history)
So far, Will You Marrow Me? has been educating desis on the importance of registering as marrow and stem cells donors. To that end, family and friends have collaborated with local temples and gurudwaras in the GTA to host swabbing clinics there so that the dismal number of donors on the Canadian Blood Services’ OneMatch Stem Cell and Marrow Network can see a surge in numbers.
Most people, if asked will tell you with absolute clarity, the precise moment their life changed. Moneet incidentally has two. The first? When she was told she had cancer and the other one happened recently.
Moneet recently learned a bone marrow match had been found. This is akin to winning a windfall because less than 25 per cent of patients who need stem cell transplants find a match in their family, most have to depend on an unrelated donor. Here’s how Moneet describes the ‘moment.’
“When I recently met the doctor, he began by saying, ‘one week ago we found…’ my heart dropped,” Moneet recalled. “I was so afraid he was going to say they found leukemia cells. Thank god, that was not the case and so he (doctor) continued, ‘we found your match.’ I was so ecstatic; I jumped off the hospital bed. The dark cloud had been lifted.”
As I write this, I can only imagine the potency of hope that resides in the Mann household now.
Their hard work with Will You Marrow Me? has garnered results. In December, the number of South Asians on the registry was 3.1 per cent, in March it has edged to 3.6 per cent.
“I am not saying it is because of Will You Marrow Me? but I am proud of my community members for taking a stand and registering,” Moneet said. “We need to build a pool of South Asian donors so that patients like myself have better chances of finding their donor.”
The Facebook page of Will You Marrow Me? currently has some 5,390 likes and thousands of shares.
“The fact that thousands of people were listening to my story and wanted to help, gave me the strength I needed to carry on,” Moneet told Toronto Desi Diaries. “I will continue to help others especially those in need of a stem cell and marrow transplant because I know how devastating the news of cancer can be and how difficult it actually is to find a match from within your own ethnicity/heritage.”
When Moneet was told she had leukemia last October, she was in the final year of a BA/B.Ed program at Lakehead University. Just a few days earlier, she and few of her friends, had taken part in the Dirty Girls Mud Run in Thunder Bay, Ont. in support of the Canadian Cancer Society. Little did she know, in a strange quirk of fate, she was in fact inadvertently supporting, not just the hundreds of others stricken by cancer, but herself.

Since it all began at a fundraiser, this August, Moneet's friends will be taking part in the Dirty Girls Mud Run in support of Moneet. Photo courtesy Facebook

Since it all began at a fundraiser, this August, Moneet’s friends will be taking part in the Dirty Girls Mud Run in support of Moneet.
Photo courtesy Facebook

On Saturday, May 24, Moneet will be at the Carassauga Festival at Hershey Centre (community rinks # 3) at 5500 Rose Cherry Place in Mississauga from 1-6 p.m. for a swab clinic.
Please drop by because cancer strikes without a warning and in a blink of an eye, the life you take for granted, can change—irreversibly.
For more information, visit here

Desis play Holi in unholy weather

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The KC Group Canada celebrated the festival of colours Holi in sub-zero temperature. Photo by Radhika Panjwani

The KC Group Canada celebrated the festival of colours Holi in sub-zero temperature.

For years now, the KC Group Canada has refused to let the Canadian winter/spring come in the way of its Holi celebrations.

Holi is a festival of colours celebrated in most parts of India at the start of spring. The colour-run  can be compared to the La Tomatina festival of Spain, except in this case, tomatoes are not harmed in the revelry. In fact, there are no fruit or vegetables involved.

For Holi, masses of people take to the streets armed with water guns and coloured powder called ‘Gulal’ which they toss at one another. In the larger scheme of things, Holi gives everyone—adults and children—a chance to bring out their inner child.

In India, the festival is played outdoors, but here in Canada, the KC Group celebrated Holi indoors inside the National Banquet Hall in Mississauga.

Also, the play of Holi was restricted to a small area on the hardwood dance floor. It sure got cramped in the space as people jostled around. One can only imagine the horror on the faces of the cleaning crew should they discover the stubborn colour stuck to the carpet, furniture and upholstery. Nevertheless, despite the obvious limitations, some 300 people let their hair down and partied as if there was no tomorrow.

The KC Group Canada has been celebrating Holi and Diwali in Canada despite the fact that the realities of weather here along with combination of city bylaws dilute the fun a bit. Also, in Canada, organizers sanitize the tradition by making it all above board.

The KC Group Canada celebrated the festival of colours Holi at the National Banquet Hall in Mississauga.

The KC Group Canada celebrated the festival of colours Holi at the National Banquet Hall in Mississauga.

Let me explain, in India, one of the staples of Holi is a drink called Bhang. Now, Bhang is a drink made from the leaves and flowers of the cannabis plant. Using a mortar and pestle, people smash the leaves and flowers and grind it to a fine paste which they incorporate into a drink. It’s not uncommon—in India— to see men completely wasted on Holi and looking comical with multi-coloured hues of gulal stuck the faces, hair and clothes.

As a South Indian, I was always envious of the traditions practiced in the North. Seriously, how cool is that you can get drunk on Holi and gamble on Diwali?

Food and drink aside, Holi is about dancing. No one can sing a Holi song better than Indian’s evergreen superstar Amitabh Bachchan. His deep gravelly voice has some kind of power. When I heard his songs at the KC Group’s Holi bash, I was filled with sheer nostalgia of the past. Ah, those were the days.