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The Bombay Royale know their past, and are making their own future on the foundations of the masters. I will take a whole record of these sides. This fuzzy, horn filled, sitar laced, bass in your face bonus cut is simply dope. You also get a bonus Psych/Funk cut “Sleeping Giant”. IMHO, the best of the remixes on the 12”. We have meats such as chicken, lamb, goat, and seafood, but we also have vegetarian and vegan dishes. Just like the variations in culture and traditions in the food, our Indian Restaurant is also very diverse. Monkeymarc’s version keeps it on the after hours, down tempo tip, injecting the boom bap that gets quite electric at the end. Come to Bombay Royale for The Best Indian Cuisine in Northampton. Damn Moroda’s re-edit is heavy on the bass, emphasis on heavy. A deep love of Bollywood was the springboard, but over three albums (2012s You Me Bullets. PaosBionic goes in hard on the Dilla tip but keeps the Bollywood flow in tact, giving the listener a sampling of sitars, Bengali lyrics and head nodding all the way through. The Bombay Royale, with leader Andy Williamson fourth from right, sing in Hindi, Bengali and English. Each remix is of a different flavor, and if you’re not familiar with The Bombay Royale, this gives you a proper introduction to a project who breaks new grounds while preserving the integrity of this flamboyant genre. The band enlisted Melbourne beatsmith PasoBionic, Damn Moroda’s bassrave, and the down tempo boom bap of Monkeymarc to give the tune a relick. Their latest release “Phone Baje Na or phone doesn’t ring in Bengali, contains the original track and three very different remixes of the original haunting tune. These exotic songs (sung in Hindi, Bengali, and English) along with their live stage show in the Bollywood tradition, has produced some amazing results. Combining the roots of Bollywood music with big band style, the Bombay Royale brings a unique sound to every performance. Inspired by these obscure tunes they were bringing to audiences in the club and festival circuit, they started writing new, original music of their own. Originally formed to bring the amazing sounds of Bollywood’s Golden Era of the 1960’s and 1970’s to the Melbourne party goers, the band transformed into something new and different all together. Melbourne’s The Bombay Royale are on a mission.









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