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“They’re two boys just trying to be
themselves when other aspiring rappers here
are trying so hard to be ‘rappers’, if you know
what I mean,” says Azadi co-founder Mo Joshi,
on the phone from Chandigarh. “I think that’s
why they have such an incredible connection
with their fans.”
B
ro, supplee lag gayi (Bro, I have
to give a supplementary exam),”
complains Negi, looking up from
a textbook as I walk into the
bedroom of Sharma’s Tilak Nagar
bachelor pad a couple of weeks
earlier. A huge Seedhe Maut
poster takes up most of the wall behind him,
while Manchester United merch and a couple
of framed CD covers – Bayaan and their debut
mixtape 2 Ka Pahada – make up the rest
of the decor. One corner, with a desk and a
computer, is the duo’s combined home studio
and gaming den. In between our interview and
a recording session for a track on label mate
Tienas’ upcoming album, Negi is trying to
cram subjects like advanced mathematics and
coastal engineering so he can finally get his
civic engineering degree, six years in. Sharma,
on the other hand, is taking much pleasure in
his friend’s misfortune. “He’s going to put this
in the article,” he cackles. “There goes your
street cred.”
More than anything, Seedhe Maut are like
an odd couple from a sitcom. The older, quieter
Negi is an introvert whose idea of a good time
is just chilling at home with a spliff. He doesn’t
drink much, and used to hate nightclubs before
he met Sharma. With his gaunt face and
kohl-tinged eyes, he radiates a quiet, brooding
intensity. In contrast, Sharma is an ebullient
extrovert who starts every other sentence with
Delhi’s signature elongated “Brooooo”. Sharma
goes through life with a joie de vivre that’s
infectious, greeting every new development
with multiple-exclamation-marks excitement.
Never seen without his oversized square specs,
he’s the life of every after-party. “It works out
great, because Calm can go out and mingle
with people easily, do the networking,” says
Negi. “That really helped us get gigs and stuff,
especially in the early days.”
They’ll often complete each other’s
sentences. During interviews, you sometimes
feel like a third wheel – they can keep a
conversation going for hours with little more
than a few encouraging nods from your end,
jumping from tangent to tangent. They don’t
deploy the filters usually used by artists when
speaking to the press, either. A question about
their latest live show can lead to anything from
anecdotes about meeting Ranveer Singh at the
GQ Style & Culture Awards in March this
year (“He had a speaker playing “Apna Time
Producer
Sez On The Beat
Part of the buzz around them is thanks to
their explosive live shows. At Azadi Records’
second-anniversary celebration at Mumbai’s
Khar Social earlier this year, the opening bars
of Seedhe Maut’s first track hit the crowd
like a tsunami, igniting a mosh pit that sent
bodies flying across the floor like billiard
balls. But this is just one piece of the puzzle.
In fact, Seedhe Maut’s secret sauce is their
unique dynamic: Two young friends finding
their way in a world gone awry. On Bayaan,
their critically acclaimed nine-track debut
album, Sharma and Negi channel the angst
and frustration of middle India’s Gen Z as they
confront an adulthood more complicated than
they expected.
This generation has inherited a country
that is no longer the India from their civics
textbooks. Today’s young adults are navigating
new rules of romance in the age of sexting and
#MeToo, trying to unlearn toxic masculinity
without the help of a gender studies education.
They’re faced with the task of handling an
impending environmental crisis that their
“elders” seem to have no interest in fixing.
All that, on top of the familiar conundrum of
middle-class kids everywhere – whether to
follow the safe, scripted path through life that
their parents have planned for them, or to
risk conflict and failure by setting off on their
own. Seedhe Maut’s music and lyrics speak to
these anxieties in a way neither mainstream
mass culture nor gully rap do. Perhaps that
explains their incredibly dedicated fanbase:
14-year-old boys who send them beats and
religiously follow their videogame live streams
on YouTube; teenage girls at gigs who cry
when they play romantic ballad “Gehraiyaan”
and wait hours at the gate to meet them, only
to cry again. There are even a couple of guys
who religiously follow them on tour, regularly
popping up in the duo’s Instagram Stories from
shows all over the country.