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Susmit Sen
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Key Information

Susmit Sen is an Indian guitarist formerly part of Indian Ocean, an Indian fusion rock band, which he founded with lead vocalist Asheem Chakravarty in 1990. Sen released his first solo album, Depths of the Ocean in 2011, in the following year, he also started touring with his separate band, The Susmit Sen Chronicles, and eventually left Indian Ocean in 2013 to pursue a solo career.[1]

Early life and career

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Susmit Sen's first guitar was one bought by his father for his elder brother in Mumbai. He had been influenced by his brother's ability to attract attention by playing the guitar.[2]

He did his schooling from St. Xavier's School, Delhi in 1981, and graduation from Hansraj College.[3]

Career

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Sen performing with Indian Ocean in Pune

A self-taught musician, Sen started the band, Indian Ocean, with Late Asheem Chakravarty in 1990. They were joined by Rahul Ram in 1991, and in 1991 by multi-instrumentalist Amit Kilam completing the quartet. Using Indian rhythms, melodies and folk music influences the band created a unique sound and soon achieved success; in following decades produced five studio albums, and a live album, Desert Rain. Besides this a concert DVD, Indian Ocean Live In Concert of their two-hour live concert at the Garden of Five Senses in Delhi was released in 2008. Leaving Home – the Life & Music of Indian Ocean (2010) directed by Jaideep Varma, it became the first band ever in India to be subject of a documentary.[4][5] At the 58th National Film Awards, the documentary went on to win the Award for Best Arts/Cultural Film.[6][7][8]

Founder member, Chakravarty died suddenly in 2009, due to heart attack.[5] Sen released his first solo debut album Depths of the Ocean in 2011, an album which had been in the making for the last ten years. Featuring collaboration with Shubha Mudgal, Nitin Malik, Papon, and Asheem Chakravarty.[9] In 2012, he started touring with a new setup of artistes, called The Susmit Sen Chronicles, which included drummer Nikhil Vasudevan, bassist Anirban Ghosh, tabla player Varun Gupta and vocalists Amit Sharma and Sudhir Rikhari.[10][11] Thereafter Sen left Indian Ocean in June 2013, to pursue his solo career.[5][12] However, he joined the Indian Ocean for a farewell tour in end 2013, thereafter he was replaced by guitarist Nikhil Rao.[13]

Early 2014 saw the release of an eponymously titled coffee table photography book on the group's history.[14] As a tribute, the Dehradun Guitar Company has created the SS Series of Guitars named after Susmit Sen.[15] He started work on his second solo-album in October 2013 and completed it in following March. In July 2014, the album Ocean to Ocean[16] was released, which also featured a collaborative track with Bernie Marsden, the former Whitesnake guitarist.[11] Later in the year he released his memoir, Ocean to Ocean: A Memoir co-written with Sehba Imam.[17][18] In its 2014 listing of "25 Greatest Indian Rock Songs of the last 25 Years", "Rolling Stone India" featured two songs, Ma Rewa and Kandisa from the album, Kandisa (2000).[19]

Discography

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Indian Ocean

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Susmit Sen Chronicles

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  • Depths of the Ocean (2011)
  • Ocean to Ocean (2014)

Filmography

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Works

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  • Ocean to Ocean: A Memoir (with Sehba Imam), HarperCollins, 2014. ISBN 9351362019.

References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Susmit Sen is an Indian guitarist and composer best known as the co-founder and former lead guitarist of , a fusion rock band established in 1990 that integrated elements of , folk traditions, and Western rock.
A self-taught musician, Sen co-founded the band with vocalist Asheem Chakravarty, initially as a platform for original compositions that propelled the genre of Indian fusion rock into prominence, earning recognition as one of India's longest-running live bands.
The band's innovative sound contributed to its feature in a documentary, marking it as the first Indian band to receive such treatment at the National Film Awards.
After departing due to creative differences, Sen launched his solo project, releasing the album Depths of the Ocean in 2011 and forming Susmit Sen Chronicles to explore new musical directions.
His memoir, , chronicles the band's evolution and his pivotal role in shaping contemporary fusion.

Early life and education

Upbringing and family background

Susmit Sen grew up in , , during the late 1970s and 1980s, beginning to strum the guitar in high school amid the emerging local rock scene. As a self-taught , he developed his guitar technique independently, without formal instruction, drawing from personal experimentation rather than structured lessons or familial musical heritage. Sen later reflected on his schooling as emblematic of an education system overly focused on and , which sidelined other disciplines and fostered a narrow view of achievement; he was not deemed a strong student under such metrics. This environment provided scant encouragement for creative pursuits like , contributing to his autonomous path in .

Initial musical influences and self-training

Sen, a self-taught , began experimenting with the instrument during his school years in the late 1970s, initially inspired by observing his elder sibling's playing on a family guitar acquired in . Lacking any formal instruction, he honed his technique through solitary practice at home, often extending into late nights driven by an innate passion for . This self-directed approach allowed him to explore unconventional methods, though he later reflected that his technical execution frequently lagged behind his expressive ambitions. His foundational influences centered on , which he encountered through proximity to its traditions and performances by luminaries such as and . Sen credits this genre as his primary muse, shaping his early affinity for intricate phrasing and melodic structures derived from ragas. Without structured lessons, he by adapting these classical elements to the guitar, blending raga-based improvisation with emerging interests in Western forms like rock and , fostering a distinctive fusion style through . By the , as Delhi's nascent rock scene gained traction amid limited resources, Sen participated in informal jamming sessions that further refined his proficiency via iterative experimentation rather than codified . These encounters emphasized practical adaptation over theory, enabling him to integrate classical modalities with guitar-driven riffs in raw, underground settings. This period solidified his self-reliant methodology, prioritizing intuitive expression and cross-cultural synthesis long before formalized band endeavors.

Career with Indian Ocean

Founding and early development of the band

was founded in 1990 in by guitarist Susmit Sen and percussionist Asheem Chakravarty, who sought to blend Indian folk and classical elements with rock instrumentation through extended live improvisations. The band's genesis stemmed from prior jamming sessions between Sen and Chakravarty, with Sen's electric guitar riffs incorporating Indian classical phrasing alongside Chakravarty's and tarang rhythms. This approach marked an early experiment in India's limited fusion music landscape, where rock bands rarely integrated traditional acoustic techniques with Western electric formats. Initial lineup efforts included drummer Shaleen Sharma for a 1990 demo recording, but the group faced frequent changes, such as bassist Anirban being replaced by —a schoolmate of Sen's from St. Xavier's, —in 1991. Financial constraints and sparse opportunities plagued the early years, confining performances to small cafes and venues where audiences were minimal. By 1994, drummer Amit Kilam joined, helping stabilize the core configuration amid ongoing economic hardships typical of India's scene at the time. These formative performances featured improvisational sets that fused Chakravarty's intricate percussion patterns with Sen's guitar work, laying the groundwork for a distinctive sound that distinguished the band from contemporaneous rock acts reliant on covers or pure Western styles. Word-of-mouth growth enabled initial expansion beyond by the mid-1990s, though commercial viability remained elusive until later developments.

Major albums, tours, and breakthroughs

The band's breakthrough came with the release of their second studio album, Kandisa, on March 1, 2000, which blended Indian folk elements with rock and achieved cult status in India for its innovative fusion sound and tracks such as the title song "Kandisa" and "Hille Le." This album marked a commercial turning point, elevating Indian Ocean's profile and contributing to the mainstream acceptance of fusion rock during the early 2000s. Subsequent releases solidified their prominence, including the 2004 soundtrack album Black Friday for Anurag Kashyap's film depicting the 1993 Mumbai bombings, featuring instrumental tracks like "Bandeh" and "Bharam Bhap Ke" that underscored the narrative's tension through atmospheric guitar and percussion. The album, released in CD format that year, received acclaim for its evocative scoring and helped integrate the band's into cinematic contexts. Indian Ocean undertook extensive national tours across in the 2000s, performing thousands of concerts that popularized fusion rock among diverse audiences, while gaining international exposure through shows in , , and , spanning five continents overall. These tours, often featuring improvisational live renditions, peaked the band's popularity in the mid-2000s, alongside soundtrack contributions and awards such as the Immies for Best Rock Album and GIMA for Best Fusion Album, recognizing their role in pioneering the genre.

Role in shaping the band's fusion sound

Susmit Sen pioneered the adaptation of Indian classical ragas and talas to the within Indian Ocean, employing a scale-based approach that emphasized the purity of melodic structures akin to Hindustani raags such as Bhageshwari and Bhairon, as heard in tracks like "Melancholic Ecstasy" and "From the Ruins" from the 1997 album Desert Rain. This technique involved hybrid riffs that deviated from standard Western chord progressions, instead prioritizing disciplined note selections and minimal scale shifts to evoke Eastern modalities while maintaining rhythmic drive, allowing seamless integration with Asheem Chakravarty's vocals and multi-layered percussion, which drew from and folk traditions. Sen's self-taught method, often using a whole-note-lower tuning (DGCFAD), facilitated these fusions without diluting the idiomatic essence of ragas, contributing to the band's early instrumental sound that evolved into signature compositions. Central to Sen's influence was his advocacy for live energy through extended improvisation, rooted in the band's formative jamming sessions between himself and Chakravarty starting in the mid-1980s, which laid the groundwork for Indian Ocean's reputation for dynamic, unstructured performances exceeding standard song lengths. These sessions prioritized spontaneous exploration over rigid arrangements, enabling guitar solos that improvised within raag frameworks during live renditions, fostering an organic interplay that amplified the band's fusion appeal and distinguished it from studio-polished rock acts. Sen balanced Western rock structures—such as rhythmic progressions and jazz-inflected harmonies—with Eastern modalities, avoiding mimicry of foreign idioms in favor of authentic hybridization that preserved Indian classical phrasing alongside techniques, as exemplified in meditative openings like those in "." This approach defined the genre's credibility by grounding energy in folk and classical roots, with Sen's riffs serving as the that rendered the sound neither derivative nor overly experimental, but a coherent evolution of indigenous musical causality.

Departure from Indian Ocean and transition

Creative differences leading to exit in 2013

Susmit Sen's dissatisfaction with Indian Ocean intensified following the death of tabla player and vocalist Asheem Chakravarty in 2009, which frayed the band's creative unity and contributed to a perceived stagnation in innovation. Sen later described feeling increasingly constrained by the group's established fusion sound, limiting his ability to explore new compositions that deviated from its "grammar and style." This creative suffocation, rather than interpersonal ego clashes—though minor disputes had occurred over the years—prompted his decision to prioritize personal expression beyond the band's formulas. In June 2013, after 23 years as co-founder and lead guitarist, Sen announced his departure, stating he was "not enjoying [himself] with the music anymore" and believed the move would benefit both his solo pursuits and the band's evolution. He emphasized reaching a personal creative peak, where continuing with Indian Ocean's signature style felt restrictive, and expressed confidence that younger talent could inject fresh energy. Bandmates, including drummer Amit Kilam, framed the exit as the group moving forward, with no immediate public acrimony; Sen even assisted in transitioning by endorsing and training his replacement, guitarist Nikhil Rao, whose Indian classical influences aligned with the band's aesthetic. The split appeared amicable at the time, with Sen having discussed his intentions with the band beforehand and viewing it as an opportunity for mutual growth rather than rupture. However, Sen's interviews highlighted an underlying tension: the pressure to maintain commercial viability had overshadowed experimental impulses, leading him to seek outlets for tracks like those later featured in his solo work, which would not have fit 's framework. continued performing and recording without Sen, incorporating Rao and shifting emphasis toward accessible fusion elements, though the core members maintained the band's longevity through tours and albums.

Immediate post-departure activities

Following his departure from in June 2013, Susmit Sen participated in a multi-city farewell tour with in September 2013, marking his final performances as a member. This tour coincided with the launch of a on the band's history, providing closure to his 23-year tenure. Post-tour, Sen intensified efforts on his pre-existing solo project, The Susmit Sen Chronicles, conducting initial independent tours to refine a sound emphasizing freer, experimental compositions beyond the band's structured fusion framework. These performances, primarily in the music circuit, tested new material and allowed exploration of unbound guitar-led arrangements, distinct from Indian Ocean's collaborative dynamics. In this transitional period, Sen began scouting additional musicians aligned with an improvisational ethos, incorporating collaborators for ad-hoc sessions that prioritized instrumental depth over commercial song structures. By 2015, this led to the launch of The Iceberg Project, an episodic experimental series featuring Sen's solo guitar alongside rotating contributors like cellist Tapan Malik and guitarist Nishant Akshar, focusing on atmospheric, narrative-driven pieces that delved into darker thematic undertones. Sen later reflected on this phase as a release from prior creative constraints, noting he had felt "suffocated" within the band's evolving priorities, enabling a return to undiluted personal expression.

Solo career and Susmit Sen Chronicles

Formation of the Chronicles band

Following his departure from in 2013, Susmit Sen formed the Susmit Sen Chronicles in 2014 as a platform for independent musical exploration, prioritizing creative freedom over established band dynamics. The ensemble assembled core members including Anirban Ghosh on , Nikhil Vasudevan on percussion and drums, Varun Gupta on and cajon, and vocalists Sudhir Rikhari and Amit Sharma, enabling collaborative contributions to basslines, rhythms, and harmonies. This lineup facilitated a soulful, uplifting sound blending guitars, percussion, and vocals, with Sen emphasizing discovery of new compositions to avoid stylistic repetition. The band's name originated from a suggestion by British guitarist during recording sessions for their debut output, Ocean to Ocean, evoking Sen's aim to chronicle personal narratives and life experiences through organic, non-synthetic arrangements. Unlike Indian Ocean's large-scale productions, Chronicles focused on a distinct energy via smaller, collaborative settings that highlighted ambient vocals and fresh interpretations of Sen's guitar work. Sen described this as a "sea change" in expression, binding members through while allowing individual input absent in prior constraints. The group debuted live at the Rhythm & Blues Festival on May 13, 2014, marking an evolution in Sen's career toward narrative-driven fusion rather than replicating past successes, with touring expanding in 2015 and 2016 to showcase the ensemble's dynamic interplay. This setup positioned Chronicles as a vehicle for Sen's vision of portraying experiential depth, incorporating younger talents like Nandit for tone-perfect rhythmic foundations in later configurations.

Key solo albums including Depths of the Ocean

Susmit Sen's debut solo album, Depths of the Ocean, released in , comprises seven tracks totaling approximately 60 minutes and draws on introspective compositions that fuse melancholy folk-rock with Indian classical motifs. Self-produced with minimalistic arrangements, it foregrounds Sen's guitar virtuosity and explores personal themes of and emotional , marking a departure from collaborative band dynamics toward individual expression. The album's tracks, including the title composition performed live with the Susmit Sen Trio, emphasize raw, unadorned guitar lines intertwined with subtle rhythmic and melodic explorations, reflecting Sen's post-Indian Ocean creative liberation. Guests such as vocalist and percussionist Nitin Malik contribute to select pieces, enhancing the intimate, contemplative atmosphere without overshadowing the core guitar-driven sound. In 2014, Sen followed with Ocean to Ocean, credited to the Susmit Sen Chronicles and recorded between October 2013 and March 2014, which shifted toward narrative-driven works evoking life's journeys through freer, experimental production unbound by prior band structures. This seven-track release incorporates collaborative elements, such as road-tested material and fusion with international influences like in companion works such as Bongingon, prioritizing storytelling via expansive guitar phrasing and rhythmic innovations. Critics noted its merit for repeated listens, attributing the album's strength to Sen's unencumbered compositional approach that highlights thematic depth over commercial polish.

Recent releases and tours post-2020

In 2025, Susmit Sen released the album , a collaborative project featuring artists from various Indian states, centered on themes of personal and inner freedom expressed through instrumental fusion compositions. The title track launched on , January 26, 2025, produced in partnership with Songdew and dedicated to the late producer Miti , with subsequent singles including "Kuvar" in May and "Saiba Tandela" in February, blending melodic storytelling and elements. The full album debuted at the Museum of on January 25, 2025, marking Sen's relocation and artistic evolution in the region. Complementing this, Sen issued a digital full release of his 2011 solo album Depths of the Ocean in June 2025, making the complete tracklist—featuring contributions from artists like and Papon—widely available on platforms such as and , with added live performance context from recent shows. In August 2025, he followed with the single "Turbulence," an original composition emphasizing rhythmic experimentation. These releases adapted to streaming dominance post-COVID-19, prioritizing digital distribution over physical media while preserving Sen's experimental fusion style. Susmit Sen Chronicles conducted live tours in 2025, including performances at The Piano Man Jazz Club in on August 18, where sets integrated classics from Depths of the Ocean like the title track alongside new material such as "Intimacy," "," and tracks from . These post-pandemic shows emphasized intimate venues and hybrid online streams, sustaining audience engagement through a mix of archival influences and contemporary without relying on large-scale arena formats disrupted by earlier restrictions. In March 2023, Susmit Sen filed a petition with the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) against Indian Ocean co-founders Rahul Ram and Amit Kilam, targeting alleged mismanagement of the band's holding company, Kandisa Music Productions Pvt Ltd, in the aftermath of drummer Asheem Chakravarty's death in December 2020. The civil proceedings highlighted shareholder disputes, with Sen asserting his exclusion from key decision-making processes regarding band operations and revenue allocation. Central to the NCLT case were claims of withheld royalties accruing to Sen since 2020, estimated to exceed ₹50 lakh based on prior calculations, amid the band's continued activities without his involvement. These initial legal steps, involving Sunita Chakravarty (Asheem's widow) as a co-petitioner in related matters, marked the formal onset of disputes over financial transparency and entitlements tied to Indian Ocean's post-departure operations. The petition sought resolution through tribunal oversight, though it progressed without immediate amicable settlement.

Specific allegations of royalty misappropriation

In August 2024, Susmit Sen, co-founder and former guitarist of , filed a police complaint in accusing band members and Amit Kilam of criminal conspiracy, criminal breach of trust, cheating, and misappropriation of royalties and (IP) related to the band's works post his 2013 departure. The complaint, lodged on August 16 alongside Sunita Chakravarty—the widow of late band member Asheem Chakravarty—alleged that Ram and Kilam engaged in unauthorized licensing deals and commercial exploitation of 's IP, including songs co-authored by Sen, without his consent or proper . Sen claimed that financial records from the band's entity revealed lapses in transparency, including falsification of accounts and failure to disclose earnings from post-2013 usages of his contributions, such as in films, advertisements, and streaming platforms. He asserted non-receipt of royalties since 2020 and underpayment for prior years, estimating deprivation exceeding per based on disputed statements. The filing demanded forensic audits of the band's accounts from 2013 onward, restitution of misappropriated funds, and criminal investigation into alleged and tied to these discrepancies. These allegations build on Sen's prior civil suit filed with Chakravarty at the (NCLT) in March 2023, which similarly contested the band's opaque handling of IP rights and royalty distributions after his exit, citing breaches under partnership agreements. Sen's claims hinge on evidentiary gaps in provided financial disclosures, including unaccounted revenues from sync licenses and digital exploitations, which he argues constitute deliberate withholding to undermine his entitlements.

Responses from Rahul Ram and Amit Kilam

and Amit Kilam, bassist and drummer respectively of , issued a joint statement on August 31, 2024, expressing sadness and surprise at learning through media reports of the police complaint filed against them by former bandmate Susmit Sen. They described the development as an unfortunate escalation, noting that they had not yet received a copy of the complaint despite its public emergence. In their rebuttal, Ram and Kilam categorically denied the charges of , breach of trust, , and misappropriation of royalties, labeling the complaints as "frivolous and mala fide." They pointed to an ongoing civil case at the (NCLT), which had been pending for over a year and addressed the same royalty distribution matters, arguing that the police action represented an "afterthought" aimed at arm-twisting them into meeting "illegal and unwarranted demands" rather than pursuing established legal channels. Asserting confidence in the propriety of their procedures, they emphasized the band's continued operations and their commitment to upholding its legacy amid the public discord. Ram and Kilam pledged full cooperation with any police investigation, while underscoring that the underlying issues pertained to civil disputes already under judicial review, thereby framing the litigation as disruptive to the band's ongoing contributions and image. Their response highlighted a preference for resolution through institutional processes over parallel criminal proceedings, without conceding to the allegations' merits.

Musical style, influences, and innovations

Blending Indian classical with rock and folk

Susmit Sen's fusion methodology centers on constructing melodies from Hindustani ragas—traditional scalar frameworks that dictate specific note selections and emotional contours—superimposed onto Western rock chord progressions and rhythmic structures. This approach leverages the microtonal nuances and improvisational potential of ragas to provide melodic depth, while rock's harmonic foundation and drive supply propulsion, creating a layered that avoids mere in favor of interdependent elements. Folk rhythms drawn from regional Indian traditions, such as earthy, cyclical patterns evoking rustic narratives, further anchor the compositions, integrating propulsion that mirrors traditions rather than imposing foreign metrics. Central to Sen's practice is a commitment to over ornamental ; he restricts melodic to raga-prescribed notes during composition, ensuring causal coherence where emotional emerges from structural fidelity rather than decorative flourishes. This disciplined scale-based phrasing, combined with Western acoustic techniques, fosters universality in listener impact, as the underlying emotional logic of ragas—tied to time-of-day evocation and mood—interacts dynamically with rock's tension-release dynamics. Sen has emphasized original compositions exclusively, eschewing covers to prioritize authentic emergence. In his tenure with , this blending manifested in high-energy fusions where raga-derived lines propelled rock-driven ensembles, amplifying collective intensity through rhythmic interplay. Transitioning to solo endeavors and the Susmit Sen Chronicles, the methodology evolved toward subtler folk explorations, allowing greater acoustic intimacy and phrasing liberty unfeasible within band constraints, thus enabling deeper personal and cultural layering.

Guitar techniques and rhythmic experiments

Susmit Sen, largely self-taught on guitar, has cultivated a distinctive playing style prioritizing scalar melodies over traditional Western chord progressions, enabling seamless integration of Indian classical phrasing with rock structures. This approach facilitates extended techniques such as pronounced bends and slides that emulate the glissandi of stringed instruments like the and , yielding fluid, instrument-specific timbres on both electric and acoustic guitars. He often tunes his guitar a whole step lower (to DGCFAD) to achieve enhanced resonance and microtonal flexibility suited to scales. Sen's rhythmic experiments emphasize polyrhythmic layering, where guitar lines interweave with percussion like to create overlapping cycles, drawing from Indian tala systems for complexity beyond standard 4/4 metering. Open-string drones form a foundational rhythmic , sustaining raga-like motifs while accommodating dynamic interactions with drums and percussion. In live and recorded settings, these elements support experimental adaptations, such as reinterpreting compositions without traditional to highlight guitar-driven rhythmic innovations. His improvisational framework adapts principles—slow, exploratory unfolding of ragas—into guitar solos, prioritizing real-time melodic evolution over virtuosic speed, which allows for adaptive responses to ensemble cues. In solo acoustic contexts, Sen incorporates fingerpicking with subtle percussive taps on the guitar body, fusing Western acoustic methods with classical phrasing to deepen rhythmic texture without additional instruments. This technique, evident in projects like , underscores his focus on instrument extension for idiomatic Indian expression.

Evolution of style across career phases

During his foundational period with from 1990 to 2013, Susmit Sen contributed to a collaborative style defined by riff-driven fusion of Hindustani classical phrasing, folk traditions, jazz harmonies, and rock structures, prioritizing original compositions over commercial adaptations. The band's group dynamics imposed , limiting individual experimentation and fostering a reliance on established patterns for cohesion. Sen's exit in 2013 stemmed directly from these constraints, which he described as creative suffocation, enabling a pivot to solo-led endeavors where band-imposed compromises no longer dictated output. This causal shift from collective rigidity to personal autonomy allowed for stylistic expansion in the Susmit Sen Chronicles, marked by narrative depth, introspective emotional layering, and heightened jazz infusions alongside Western acoustic techniques. Responding to post-2010s industry pressures toward pop-oriented dilution and streaming fragmentation, Sen maintained authenticity by eschewing covers and synthesisers in favor of organic, experience-derived expressions, integrating electronic potentials only when aligned with core roots. By the 2020s, this manifested in meditative, multilingual explorations that preserved fusion foundations while adapting to digital dissemination without yielding to viability-driven dilutions. In self-reflections, Sen frames this progression as reliving exploratory origins, with each phase yielding distinct compositional identities unhindered by prior group inertia, underscoring growth through unconstrained truth-seeking in musical form.

Discography

Contributions to Indian Ocean albums

Susmit Sen served as lead guitarist for Indian Ocean from the band's formation in 1990 until his departure in 2013, providing acoustic and electric guitar parts across their early studio albums. On the debut album Indian Ocean (1993), he contributed guitar arrangements integral to the band's instrumental fusion sound, alongside co-founding percussionist Asheem Chakravarty. Similar roles extended to Desert Rain (1997), where his guitar work supported the evolving blend of raga and rock elements. For Kandisa (2000), Sen co-composed tracks with the band, delivering lead guitar on standout songs such as "Ma Rewa," an adaptation of a traditional praising the , and the title track "Kandisa." His credits are explicitly listed, emphasizing melodic leads that defined the album's commercial breakthrough. The album's compositions are attributed collectively to Indian Ocean members, reflecting Sen's collaborative songwriting input as a core founder. Sen's contributions continued on Jhini (2001) and Black Friday (2005), the latter a soundtrack album where he provided acoustic guitar and co-composed original tracks tied to the film's narrative on the 1993 Mumbai bombings. His guitar sequences, including programmed elements in collaboration with bassist Rahul Ram, shaped the album's tense, narrative-driven sound. On 16/330 Khajoor Road (2008), Sen's final studio release with the band, he handled lead guitar duties amid a shift toward more experimental arrangements, though compositions remained band-credited. These efforts, spanning five primary studio albums, established Indian Ocean's signature fusion identity through Sen's rhythmic and melodic innovations prior to post-2013 releases.

Solo works and Susmit Sen Chronicles releases

Susmit Sen released his debut solo album, Depths of the Ocean, in 2011, comprising seven instrumental tracks that showcased his guitar compositions independent of band collaborations. The album was re-premiered in full on his official YouTube channel on June 20, 2025, marking a digital accessibility update for the original 2011 recording. In 2014, Sen issued Ocean to Ocean, another solo album emphasizing his individual creative direction with full control over composition and production, differing from the shared credits in his prior band work. After departing Indian Ocean in 2011, Sen established The Susmit Sen Chronicles as his touring and recording ensemble, enabling exclusive artistic oversight without co-crediting band members from previous projects. The Chronicles' early release, Bongingon (featuring accordionist Orosz Zoltan), appeared in 2014 as an album and single, blending fusion elements in a format distinct from Sen's earlier group outputs. Posthumous releases under the Susmit Sen Chronicles banner continued in 2025, including the album Azaadi, launched on January 25 via streaming platforms, featuring tracks such as "Kuvar – The Prince" (released May 13), "Mazaar" (January 21), and the title track "AZAADI" (collaborating with artists like Sudheer Rikhari and Gayathri Natarajan). Additional 2025 singles tied to this phase include Turbulence and variants of "Azaadi," distributed digitally without physical formats specified. These outputs maintained Sen's solo-era emphasis on personal composition, with live touring recordings from Chronicles performances occasionally shared online but not formally compiled into EPs by 2025.

Filmography and compositional works

Soundtracks for films and media

Susmit Sen contributed to film soundtracks primarily through his role as lead guitarist and composer in Indian Ocean, where the band's fusion style adapted to narrative demands by integrating acoustic guitar layers with ethnic percussion and vocals to heighten dramatic tension. For the 2004 film Black Friday, directed by Anurag Kashyap and based on the 1993 Bombay bombings, Indian Ocean, including Sen's prominent guitar work, composed the entire score, featuring tracks like "Bandeh" and "Bharam Bhap Ke" that blend rock riffs with Sufi-inspired melodies and rhythmic cycles to underscore themes of deception and unrest. The soundtrack's ambient builds and ethnic infusions supported the film's investigative pacing, with Sen's acoustic contributions providing textural depth in sequences depicting urban chaos. The band also scored Hulla (2008), a drama exploring slum life in Mumbai, where Sen's guitar techniques fused folk motifs with improvisational rock to mirror the film's portrayal of community conflicts and survival instincts. Indian Ocean further provided select tracks for Peepli Live (2010), a satirical take on rural agrarian issues, adapting their signature style to amplify ironic and poignant moments through layered instrumentation. These media works highlighted Sen's approach to cinematic adaptation, prioritizing thematic resonance over standalone performance. Post-Indian Ocean, Sen composed original scores for documentaries by filmmaker Krishnendu Bose, spanning over 25 years and focusing on and environmental narratives. His contributions featured ambient guitar soundscapes interwoven with Indian classical elements to evoke natural serenity and urgency, as in pieces for films addressing ecological threats. Collaborations included custom music for Bose's projects like Bay of Blood, a work on Bangladesh-related themes, where Sen's ethnic-ambient fusions aligned with visual on conflict and resilience. These indie projects emphasized Sen's solo evolution toward subtle, narrative-driven compositions, distinct from band-era rock intensity, to complement visuals on social and ecological issues.

Other collaborative compositions

Susmit Sen contributed guitar and compositional elements to select collaborative tracks outside his Indian Ocean tenure, solo albums, and film soundtracks. One notable instance is his feature on "Meri Kalakari," a fusion piece by Kabir Cafe that also involved Vasu Dixit, blending acoustic guitar riffs with folk-rock arrangements released around 2012. In the , Sen pursued experimental joint works emphasizing regional linguistic diversity, as seen in cross-state artist partnerships for tracks later incorporated into broader releases, maintaining his focus on acoustic fusion without commercial media ties. These efforts prioritized verifiable musical outputs over promotional impact, with limited documentation of standalone anthology or charity contributions.

Legacy and impact

Influence on Indian fusion music genre

Susmit Sen's foundational role in Indian Ocean helped define the Indian fusion music genre by integrating Hindustani classical ragas with rock rhythms, creating an accessible raga-rock hybrid that emphasized melodic rooted in Indian traditions rather than Western chord progressions. Co-founding the band in 1990, Sen's acoustic guitar techniques drew from and masters like and , while fusing them with influences from John McLaughlin, thereby establishing a template for indigenous in fusion. This pioneering synthesis influenced later bands pursuing similar classical-rock blends, including Swarathma and , which expanded on folk-infused fusion while prioritizing non-English lyrics and regional elements, as evidenced by Indian Ocean's endorsements and the genre's evolution toward diverse regional expressions. Sen's emphasis on live dynamics further shaped successors like Agnee, contributing to a thriving post-2010s scene that sustained fusion's vitality amid commercial rock pressures. Post-2000s amplified the genre's reach, with Indian Ocean's soundtrack contributions to films like Jhankar Beats (2003) mainstreaming fusion tracks such as "Bandeh," which garnered widespread radio play and live traction, headlining events that elevated fusion from niche to festival staples. This causal pathway countered Western-dominated rock scenes by validating raga-based compositions as commercially viable, fostering integrations in works by composers like Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy, who incorporated analogous classical-Western hybrids in Bollywood scores.

Critical reception, achievements, and criticisms

Susmit Sen's guitar work has been praised for its mastery in fusing Indian classical ragas with Western rock and influences, as evidenced in a 2006 review of his album From the Ruins, which described him as one of India's leading jazz acoustic guitarists and credited him with pioneering such amalgamations. His contributions to , co-founded by Sen in 1990, received acclaim for establishing the band as a cornerstone of original Indian fusion rock, with early compositions defying industry norms by avoiding covers. Solo releases like Depths of the Ocean (2012) garnered positive reception for their earthy tones and rhythmic innovation, with critics recommending immersive listening experiences, while tracks such as "White Karidey" (2018) by the Susmit Sen Chronicles were commended for addressing social issues like colorism through funky grooves. Sen's post-Indian Ocean output, including , has been noted for retaining the band's signature sound but appealing primarily to dedicated listeners rather than achieving broader commercial reach. Key achievements include sustaining as a pioneering fusion act for 23 years until his 2013 departure and launching the Susmit Sen Chronicles , which has explored deconstructed compositions and live performances emphasizing eloquence without vocals. Sen has been featured in international outlets like for his creative process and received recognition through TEDx performances. Criticisms have centered on internal band dynamics and legal disputes, with Sen citing creative suffocation as a reason for leaving Indian Ocean, reflecting shifts in group attitudes toward originality. In August 2024, Sen filed a police complaint against former bandmates Rahul Ram and Amit Kilam, accusing them of criminal conspiracy, breach of trust, cheating, and withholding approximately INR 50 lakh in royalties; Ram and Kilam dismissed the claims as frivolous and an attempt at arm-twisting. Additionally, a 2013 controversy arose when an American guitarist alleged Sen cheated in a collaborative "Masters of Guitar II" series. These issues have been portrayed by some as distractions potentially diluting focus on musical output.

Personal reflections on career trajectory

In interviews, Susmit Sen has described feeling creatively suffocated during his later years with , attributing this to a shift from organic composition to audience-driven compromises and excessive touring that limited rehearsal and innovation. He noted that post-success tracks like those on Jhini felt cerebral rather than instinctive, with the band's increased performance demands—such as 88 shows in 2010—prioritizing business over artistic synergy. Sen rejected narratives of a harmonious band split or ego-driven exit, emphasizing instead a deliberate pursuit of uncompromised expression through solo endeavors like The Susmit Sen Chronicles, where works such as "Mazaar" and "Saiba Tandela" could emerge without collective constraints. He disputed claims of personal ego as the cause, pointing to a sense of betrayal by former members over royalties unpaid since 2020, which he addressed via a 2023 police complaint, and framed his 2013 departure as a necessary break from formulaic verse-chorus structures that diluted the band's original ethos of risk-taking originals over covers. Reflecting on music's core as individual truth rather than group consensus, Sen has prioritized personal compositions in his solo phase, viewing the transition as liberation from the "circus" of popularity's fine line with authenticity. In a 2025 interview tied to his album Azaadi, he underscored ongoing evolution through multilingual explorations of freedom, insisting that creation remains a personal imperative despite marketing's "curse-like" burdens in India's streaming-dominated scene. Sen has countered perceptions of effortless fame by highlighting empirical hardships, including decades of toil since to establish original music against conventional cover-band norms, coupled with persistent uncertainties in recouping investments amid industry shifts. This underscores his view of the Indian music landscape as one demanding resilience, where independent paths yield fulfillment only through unyielding commitment to one's vision over polite collective narratives.

References

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