It is obvious that Subhash Kamath is greatly inspired by John Lennon. It’s not only the gems that he churned out as a Beatle and thereafter but also the glasses that rested on his prominent nose that seem to have caught Kamath’s fancy. Though he wears a relatively staid pair of spectacles to work, he puts on the Lennon pair when he plays rhythm guitar.
For Kamath, listening to and playing music is a serious stress buster. “It just gives me a chance to break away from what I do,” he says. Kamath’s earliest memory is of singing as a Class IV student in Kolkata; the song was My heart is beating from Julie. A couple of years later, he managed to watch ABBA: The Movie and listen to bands like Boney M. By the time Kamath was in high school, he had formed a small band that was competing in festivals. “We were playing songs by Simon & Garfunkel and The Beatles,” he says quite nostalgically. A big influence in these early years was his father, who listened to classical music of the likes of Bhimsen Joshi and Hindi songs by KL Saigal.
It was the Young Achievers event in 2008 hosted by the Advertising Club in Mumbai that brought him back to playing music. “It was a battle of bands between those who were under 30 and the older ones like us. We beat the youngsters hollow. My band featured two other advertising professionals, Rajeev Raja and Prabhakar Mundkur. Over 20 minutes, we played songs by Ray Charles, Bob Dylan and a Kerala boat song. And that was what led to my return to music.”
Given their frenetic work schedules, playing live calls for some serious practice, which is never easy. “The performance require at least 3-4 rehearsals and that is not possible when you are travelling,” points out Kamath. If rehearsals are a constraint, he makes the most of his evenings after work. “I am usually on the internet with my headphones. Thanks to technology, one can karaoke online today. I practice for at least 30 minutes thrice or four times a week, when I keep listening to a song constantly and eventually pick up the chords,” he adds.