Trip-hop duo Sulk Station’s DIY album is a sonic tease
Sulk Station. Photo: Ketaki Joshi
Photo: Ketaki Joshi
[easyreview cat1title=”Till You Appear” cat1rating=”3″]
Longing and unrequited sentiments are best reserved for pop songs. That cliché is subverted by Bengaluru-based trip-hop duo Sulk Station, whose debut album Till You Appear is a 10-track anthology on yearning and discontentment. Singer Tanvi Rao and producer Rahul Giri put together their collective love-lust angst, smoky-room jazz style vocals, long piano pieces and Indian classical influences onto a bedroom-studio installed groovebox. The result is a lounge-y, orchestral, trip-hop sound.Â
The opener, “Pause(Intro)” ”“ languid yet dark ”“ sets the tone for the rest of the album. Â Rao renders the raga-based compositions in Urdu and Hindi with ease. Giri’s fantastic, yet simple soundscapes use synth sounds, head-bopping marching beats and heavy bass lines.
 As you progress into Till You Appear, it gets darker and the tempo picks up with frenzied drum ”˜n’ bass sections in songs like “Bindiya,” “Confession,” “Piya I” and “Piya II.” The album closes on a feverish, taut note on “Wait.” Here Rao’s vocals recall the vocal style of Brit-Tamil singer Susheela Raman.
 Till You Appear draws from a range human emotions. But lust and obsession are perhaps the strongest motifs here, lending a unifying sonic theme to the record.
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