Misc Tennis

Racquet rhythms: Somdev Devvarman talks about turning musician with his debut album ‘One3Two’

Storm Sanders was Australia’s hero after she won the first singles rubber before returning for the deciding doubles match alongside 38-year-old Samantha Stosur.

Somdev Devvarman
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Music and sport are seemingly worlds apart. One is considered a creative endeavour; the other a physical pursuit. If the masking of effort is admired in one, the exhibition of toil is appreciated in the other. The requirement of different skills makes it difficult to master both. There are, however, a few who have managed to straddle both worlds with considerable success. The late Micheline Ostermeyer, for instance, was an Olympic gold medallist (in shot put and discus throw) and an accomplished concert pianist.

“The qualities that make a true artist are nearly the same qualities that make a true athlete,” she believed.

Former Indian tennis star Somdev Devvarman concurs with Ostermeyer. Though he isn’t a master of music and sports like the French champion, Somdev is familiar with both worlds. During his playing days, he has played live gigs occasionally. Post-retirement, he has been making his pastime his primary passion project. He recently released his first single, ‘Something More Real’, from his debut album One3Two, which will be released later this month.

“The approach and the process [for music and tennis] is incredibly similar but also different in many ways. There is no perfect way of doing it. And the only wrong way of doing it is if I rush the process and not be true to myself,” he says, “Regardless of what people say, as an athlete, you need to be comfortable with your style when you’re out there. Otherwise, it’s not going to work. And I felt something similar with songwriting as well.”

Six years after hanging up his shoes in tennis, Somdev says he felt like a novice again while creating the album. “It’s a completely different thing to immerse yourself into a studio and figure out the sound that you want to create. You need to be open to constructive criticism. That was the most important thing in sports as well. You need to be brutally honest with yourself and say, ‘Hey, these are the areas that you need to improve on.’ And, the only way to improve is by repeating the process,” says Somdev, who is also a panellist on the Extraaa Serve show on Sony Sports Network.

Songwriting, for Somdev, is the favourite part in the album-making process. He has been dabbling with it for the last five years. “I had so many thoughts, feelings and concepts in my head. Whenever they kept coming to me, I wrote them down and thought if I could make them into songs. Instead of…

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