News & Updates

Exclusive Premiere: Composer Prateek Rajagopal’s Volatile Chamber Composition ‘Rub’ al Khali’

The Los Angeles-based, Muscat and Mumbai-bred artist worked with the group Salastina for an ode to growing up in Oman

Published by

The way composer-guitarist Prateek Rajagopal explains it, “metal is just in my DNA at this point.” He’s referring to his latest composition “Rub’ al Khali,” which is a striking, somewhat unsettling piece he wrote with nostalgia and mystique in mind.

Created in December 2020 as an ode to the 18 years Rajagopal spent growing up in Oman, “Rub’ al Khali” (which translates to “empty quarter”) is performed by L.A. group Salastina’s Kevin Kumar on violin, alongside musicians Meredith Crawford (viola), Yoshika Masuda (cello) and Ben Smolen (flute). Rajagopal was picked for Salastina’s Sounds Promising program, where young composers are trained and offered to have their work performed by the group.

Rajagopal – who has a prog project HOIA and has been chief riffsmith for death metal band Gutslit and instrumental act The Minerva Conduct – wrote “Rub’ al Khali” under the mentorship of Los Angeles-based concert composer Derrick Skye. Rajagopal adds about translating his feelings into sound, “There’s also a strong mystery attached to never-ending sands. Just like the ocean, to me the deserts also seem to have been unexplored completely by humans, and that sounds crazy.”

He created a story and composed the piece by visualizing an Arab prince who sets out to search the desert for power. “Only to end up in a total downward spiral where he meets occultists and finds a mysterious hidden palace,” Rajagopal adds. Appropriately, there’s slow, delicate violin and flute portions which soon give way to a harrowing, fast-paced portion of “messed up rhythms” and the composer leaves a lot hanging in the air for interpretation.

A few years into moving to the U.S. to pursue music for screen, Rajagopal notes with pride that his film music career has taken off. He’s working with composers on Hollywood projects and writing for shows. Rajagopal adds, “So it’s 16 to 18 hour work days, but all worth it. This is what I wanted — to be a part of a complex team working on big projects, with constant learning and evolution at the highest possible level.”

Watch the video for “Rub’ al Khali” below.

Recent Posts

Six K-Dramas to Watch This Month

Features a mix of ongoing and upcoming K-drama titles such as ‘When the Stars Gossip,’…

January 6, 2025

2025 Golden Globes Red Carpet: Cynthia Erivo, Timothée Chalamet, Ariana Grande, and more stars shine

The Golden Globes kicked off the 2025 awards season on Sunday, Jan. 5. Hosted by…

January 6, 2025

Bad Bunny’s Album ‘Debí Tirar Más Fotos’ Is Here

The LP includes RaiNao, Omar Courtz, and Dei V as guests

January 6, 2025

Golden Globe Awards 2025: See the Complete Winners List

The Hollywood Foreign Press Association handed out Golden Globe awards to the best in TV…

January 6, 2025

Russ: ‘I’ll Say 2024 Was the Year of Doing Hard Things’

The hip-hop artist reflects on his 2024 journey, including his performance in India, acting projects,…

January 3, 2025

K-Drama Flashback: ‘Happiness’

‘Happiness’ highlights why K-zombies matter. It questions what differentiates humanity and monstrosity and what 'happiness'…

January 3, 2025