Navshya Kuvra had just finished playing his dhumsi (drum) for about 40 protestors dancing at south Mumbai’s Azad Maidan. Just as he sat down to rest, around 11 at night, three men approached him.
“Is it a wedding? What date?” asked Navshya. They conversed, phone numbers were exchanged, and the three moved away. Navshya turned to the group of farmers with him at the January 25 protest at the maidan, and grinned: “I just got a supari [assignment].”
In Kinhawali, his village in Dahanu taluka, Navshya and his wife Bijli grow jowar, rice and tur on around five acres of forest land. When he is not in the field, the 55-year-old farmer is busy performing. He plays the drum at 10-15 weddings a month for a fee, and the organisers cover his travel, food and accommodation costs. “Mostly [I perform in] in Nashik, but even outside. I have gone to Thane and even Gujarat,” said Navshya.
He has been playing the dhumsi for 40 years. “I heard other musicians in my village and I played and learned,” he said.





