
Penn Masala is set to unravel a capella magic with ‘Homecoming Tour’ in India
The Hindu
US-based a capella group Penn Masala is on Homecoming Tour in India and will showcase original compositions and Bollywood Mashups in their beatboxing style
Being a part of a group that was formed even before one was born can truly be euphoric. The Gen Now members of Penn Masala are the proud carriers of the a capella legacy that their predecessors started in 1996. Founded by the South Asian students of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA, the group has stayed loyal to the a capella format and incorporated jazz, rock, hip hop and their signature renditions of Bollywood mashups with regional language tracks and Carnatic and Hindustani ragas too finding space in their concerts.
The group is excited about its much-awaited multi-city India tour set to begin on May 19, 2023. Two days before they set to travel to India, three members of Penn Masala Raghunandan Raman, Prateek Adurty and Gaurish Gaur join us over a video call to update us about their Homecoming Tour, their stint with the iconic band and what it means to them to perform in India.
The unconventional music group that performs sans instruments and invokes chords through their vocals intrigued the audience and their families. Prateek’s grandparents were no different. “They would always ask me what this Penn Masala is and what I’m up to. I am happy that we can finally perform for them in India,” he says. “A lot of us hadn’t been to India in a while because of the pandemic. So it’s a nice time to meet and perform for our family. Most of our families haven’t heard us sing in a while. It’s going to be an amazing opportunity,” says Raghunandan.
Apart from performing for the home crowd, Penn Masala considers this India tour special because of some of the original music they are ready with on their setlist. The nearly two-year preparation that went into this tour will also have new sounds and songs from different languages. “Without completely moving away from our format, we will focus on creating our music rather than just being cover artistes,” says Prateek.
Penn Masala has been planning to tour India since 2017, informs Raghunandan, “We love performing in India and our largest audience is here. It’s like re-energising with our fans and directly connecting with our biggest fan base. After the delayed plans due to the pandemic, we are glad everything worked out this summer,” shares Raghunandan.
A pioneer in the South Asian a capella movement, Penn Masala has remained an all-male band whose members say they are not against admitting a female voice; however, the setlist traditionally has been for male voices. Explains Prateek, “A lot of our songs from our current setlist and our setlist in the past have primarily been arranged for male voices. So we use tenor one, tenor two baritones, and bass splits; this mix identifies us. That doesn’t mean we won’t collaborate with female artists. We have a bunch of capella groups on campus currently, there’s the female counterpart to Penn Masala. We are looking forward to collaborating with them.”
Nearly a decade ago Penn Masala paid tribute to Bollywood by releasing a video called The Evolution of Bollywood featuring 39 songs covering the period from 1949 to 2013. This video went viral and garnered nearly five million viewership. Says Gaurish, “The idea came from the trend at the time, of the evolution of music into different categories. And I think the founders were inspired by that and the idea triggered a South Asian-like twist to it.”

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