By Andrea Warner
In 2006, Sanjay Seran was recruited to play a one-off show at the . Six years later, his band is one of Vancouvers most acclaimed live acts, touring the world over with its unique Bhangra-beats-Celtic-rock-world-fusion sound. In essence, D2D is the quintessential Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»band, a perfect sonic example of our multicultural mix. Seran spoke with WE about what it means to headline the festival that changed his life.
The band was supposed to be a one-off, but now its been six years. Why does D2D work?
Because we want it to. Any project can work if people are having fun and willing to put in the work. I think weve found that balance. We work our asses off on the business side of things, including the willingness to tour like mad, and then we work even harder at maintaining the relationships in the band. When its all said and done, we get on stage and have the time of our lives.
Whats the next albums direction?
The focus for the next album is definitely on our song writing and the approach to the songs. We feel that in the past weve had some great song ideas with some great beats but have been a little lacking with regards to fully developed songs. So, for the last three months we have written just over 20 songs and weve done so more collectively than we ever have in the past resulting in what I think is a more refined and distinctive D2D sound. In the next two weeks we are going narrow down which songs are going to make the record, which ones get shelved, and which ones should never be heard by ears other than ours.
What elements are critical in separating good fusion from bad fusion?
The key is to not over think it. If it sounds good, go with it. There is no formula to make music and that still holds with fusion music. Once it starts to become contrived, I usually feel, its not going to work. All of us add our style and colour to whatever it is we may be working on and that keeps it organic, no one is faking it and thus it is real.
What does it mean to you to be able to cross genres and cultural divides with your music?
It feels absolutely amazing. Were able to make music which is truly Canadian and represents who we are as individuals. Growing up, there werent a whole lot of things that would represent both sides of who I was as a person, the little Punjabi kid and the kid who grew up in Richmond. Now to be able to make music that incorporates those elements and play it for audiences from all walks of life is a real blessing. A lot of the time the best feeling is when people dont understand the lyrics yet they are totally lost in, and enjoying, the music because then you know its the music and emotion that is connecting with them that sounds so cliche and lame but it really does feel awesome!
Delhi 2 Dublin plays Mar. 17 at the Vogue, 8pm. $30-$35 from VogueTheatre.com.