Indian-born, San Jose-based Aki Kumar, aka "The Only Bombay Blues Man," left his home in Mumbai with the intention of working as a software engineer in Silicon Valley. Then he discovered the blues, and his life dramatically changed. Singing and playing harmonica, he steeped himself in the music and became a fixture in blues clubs throughout Northern California,where he developed an unique, audacious blend of Chicago-style blues which then led to playing retro Bollywood pop mixed with the blues.
When he began performing, Kumar initially attempted to downplay his ethnicity and perform straight, Chicago-style blues. "I wanted to make a statement that I was a traditional blues man, so I wanted to be playing blues and have nobody even wonder where I came from." His attitude soon changed, and with his Little Village Foundation debut, Aki Goes to Bollywood, he began integrating elements of Indian music into his musical and visual presentation, making for a multi-cultural mash-up that sounds like no one else, yet never loses touch with its blues foundation. That unique blend of East and West reaches a new creative plateau on Aki's second Little Village Foundation album, Hindi Man Blues, which boasts Aki's most ambitious cross-cultural fusion to date, and features liner notes by veteran blues great Charlie Musselwhite.
"Kumar's visionary stylistic mix has already won him widespread attention. In addition to the local blues venues, where he's built an enthusiastic audience, he's performed at the prestigious Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival, been featured on PRI "The World," and has toured in Russia and Scandinavia. Now, after spending more than a decade developing his sound with the help of some of the Bay Area's finest blues players, Aki Kumar continues to take his love for the blues to new and fascinating place.
Indian-born, San Jose-based Aki Kumar, aka "The Only Bombay Blues Man," left his home in Mumbai with the intention of working as a software engineer in Silicon Valley. Then he discovered the blues, and his life dramatically changed. Singing and playing harmonica, he steeped himself in the music and became a fixture in blues clubs throughout Northern California,where he developed an unique, audacious blend of Chicago-style blues which then led to playing retro Bollywood pop mixed with the blues.
When he began performing, Kumar initially attempted to downplay his ethnicity and perform straight, Chicago-style blues. "I wanted to make a statement that I was a traditional blues man, so I wanted to be playing blues and have nobody even wonder where I came from." His attitude soon changed, and with his Little Village Foundation debut, Aki Goes to Bollywood, he began integrating elements of Indian music into his musical and visual presentation, making for a multi-cultural mash-up that sounds like no one else, yet never loses touch with its blues foundation. That unique blend of East and West reaches a new creative plateau on Aki's second Little Village Foundation album, Hindi Man Blues, which boasts Aki's most ambitious cross-cultural fusion to date, and features liner notes by veteran blues great Charlie Musselwhite.
"Kumar's visionary stylistic mix has already won him widespread attention. In addition to the local blues venues, where he's built an enthusiastic audience, he's performed at the prestigious Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival, been featured on PRI "The World," and has toured in Russia and Scandinavia. Now, after spending more than a decade developing his sound with the help of some of the Bay Area's finest blues players, Aki Kumar continues to take his love for the blues to new and fascinating place.
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