Defiance: An Insistence On Remaining Open

5–8 minutes

There are songs you enjoy. And then there are songs that do something to the room. That change the temperature of the air, reorganise the furniture of your chest, make you briefly unsure of the border between where you end and the music begins.

Kaya Project’s Defiance is the second kind.

It runs for exactly 4 minutes and 26 seconds. It has no lyrics in English. You couldn’t hum the melody in a shower. And yet people who encounter it describe the experience the same way, across countries, across languages: like something very old reaching through the speakers and quietly insisting you’re going to be okay.


The Man Who Made It

seb taylor dj fractal gate shakta 2 cropped

Kaya Project is essentially one person. Seb Taylor — Cambridge-born, UK-based — handles guitars, production, and a remarkable range of instruments including duduk, zheng, and zither. His first musical memory was film soundtracks — John Barry, John Williams — and you can hear it: everything has a cinematic quality, a sense of moving through emotional landscape rather than just beats in space.

Over the years he has collaborated with 20 to 30 musicians from all over the globe, building a world fusion catalogue of genuine international renown. Every album is a real gathering of traditions — not a postcard from someone else’s culture, but a genuine conversation between them.

Seb Taylor aka Kaya Project (Source psybient.org)


An Album Made for Challenging Times

Defiance was released on 29 April 2022. Seb described it simply as “an album made for challenging times.”

That phrase is doing a lot of quiet work. 2022. You know what the years before it felt like. The world had spent two years inside its own walls. Artists either froze completely or reached deep. Seb reached deep.

The title wasn’t chosen lightly. Defiance doesn’t mean anger. It means continuing anyway.


The People in the Room

kaya project live boom festival

Kaya Project at Boom Festival (Source psybient.org)

This is what surprises people who discover the track: it isn’t made by machines. It’s made by a constellation of humans from across the world, somehow sharing the same breath.

Fatima Gozlan plays ney, kaval, and fujara. Pooja Tiwari sings. Aref Durvesh plays tabla. Lorenzo Mantovani contributes sarangi.

These aren’t decorative choices.

The ney flute has been the instrument of Sufi mysticism for over 4,500 years — its breathy, imperfect tone carries the sound of breath itself, which is to say the sound of being alive and not entirely certain what that means.

ney flute
tabla

The tabla is a conversational drum; each stroke has a syllable, a name, a meaning in a centuries-old notation system.

The sarangi sustains tones with a quality that sounds almost like a human voice crying. Not dramatically. Quietly. From a distance.

raga sarangi n2

When these instruments meet Seb’s electronic architecture, something happens that can’t be reverse-engineered. It just lands.


4:26 — What Actually Happens

The timeline below maps every section.

0:00 – 0:20

The Ground Appears

The track opens on near-silence — then a low drone materialises beneath the mix like something ancient pressing up through soil. This isn’t an intro in any conventional sense. There are no drums, no obvious melody yet. Just the suggestion of depth. Seb Taylor’s signature sub-bass architecture creates a resonant field your body feels before your ears fully register it. The vagus nerve is already being gently spoken to.

0:20 – 0:40

The Ney Arrives

Fatima Gozlan’s ney flute enters. And this is where something remarkable happens. The ney is arguably the world’s oldest instrument still in active use — an oblique end-blown flute made from reed, used in Sufi devotional music for over of thousands years. When it arrives over Taylor’s electronic foundation, it doesn’t just add a melody. It adds millennia. The sound is breathy, imperfect in the most human way, tuned to microtonal intervals that don’t fit neatly inside Western scales — and your nervous system responds to that unfamiliarity by going wide-eyed and open.

0:40 – 1:35

The Tabla Locks In

Aref Durvesh’s tabla enters and the track’s pulse becomes undeniable. But notice what kind of pulse this is: not a four-on-the-floor Western kick drum demanding you move. It’s a conversation. The tabla is a talking drum — each stroke has a name, a syllable, a meaning in the Indian classical tradition. The rhythm is in dialogue with the ney, not simply keeping time beneath it. The whole texture shifts from ambient to alive. This is the point in the track where first-time listeners lean forward.

1:35 – 3:40

Pooja Tiwari’s Voice

The vocal arrives — and ‘Defiance’ finds its emotional centre. Pooja Tiwari’s voice doesn’t announce itself; it materialises, rising from the texture like something that was always there. There’s an ache to it. Not sorrow exactly — something older than sorrow. It carries the quality that Sufi poets called ‘longing’ and that neuroscientists call ‘sublime emotional arousal’: a bittersweet intensity that makes the chest expand and the eyes soften. The word ‘defiance’ in this moment stops meaning aggression. It becomes something closer to perseverance. Survival. The refusal to stop feeling.

3:40 – 4:26

The Dissolution

The final minute strips back. Not because the emotion is exhausted, but because it doesn’t need more. The ney trails away. The tabla recedes. What you’re left with is essentially the landscape you were given at the opening — but it feels completely different now. That same drone, that same depth of field, is full of everything that just happened. You don’t return to the same silence. You return changed. This is the architecture of defiance in four minutes and twenty-six seconds: not a battle cry, but a persistence. Not shouting — continuing.


Why “Defiance”?

Here’s what strikes me about that title. The word “defiance” usually conjures combat: defiance against an enemy, defiance in the face of power, fists raised, jaws set.

But listen to four minutes and twenty-six seconds of this music and tell me it sounds like that.

It doesn’t. It sounds like something much harder than fighting. It sounds like continuing. Breathing. Refusing to become numb when going numb would be so much easier.

That is the deepest form of defiance there is. Not resistance as aggression, but resistance as persistence. The insistence on remaining open to beauty, to feeling, to the genuine human complexity that music like this carries — even when everything around you is telling you to close up, simplify, move faster, feel less.

Seb Taylor closed his album notes simply: “Infinite Gratitude to all the amazing performers and artists credited below. I love you all. And to anyone who buys this album — I wouldn’t be able to do this without your support.”

No manifesto. No grand statements. Just gratitude, across countries, across instruments, across traditions, across time.

That’s the album. That’s the song.


A Note on Playing It Right

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