World Hears Manganiyars: Sound of the Desert Through the Barmer Boys

As contemporary societies turn difference into division, the Barmer Boys offer an alternative cultural logic. Rooted in the Manganiyar tradition

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Everything quiets down, and a single voice rises into the air, carrying a devotional melody through a silent room. What begins as an anticipation of a spectacle—colourful, fast and celebratory, a familiar exuberance associated with Rajasthan—slowly gives way to something far quieter and deeper. The voice carries a Sufi kalaam that transcends language, drawing tears from people’s eyes. At WOMAD in 2022, that quiet transformation was unforgettable: an audience that arrived for spectacle found itself suspended in stillness. “I did not understand a single word,” one listener said, “but I felt everything.”

And just as that stillness settles in, the morchang, an instrument that looks almost like nothing, reverberates a tranquilising effect with a sound as if it comes from somewhere very ancient, deep inside the earth. Then Sawai’s beatboxing cuts underneath this centuries-old melody, and the whole room shifts, rupturing the stillness. What unfolds is a seamless convergence of the old and the contemporary, something that defines the Barmer Boys: “Rajasthan’s folk legacy of the Manganiyars, reimagined for the 21st century.”

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