Some stories don’t need dramatic introductions, they breathe on their own. Rahasya’s story is one of them.
The latest episode of the Astrology Matrix Podcast, hosted by Yachika Verma, doesn’t feel like a typical interview. It feels like you’re sitting in the same room as the band, listening to their laughter, their struggles, their unfiltered honesty, and the way their music quietly shifts the air around them. There’s an ease in the way they speak, and yet, underneath, you sense a depth only artists who’ve lived their journey can carry.
The moment they perform “Bam Lehri,” you understand why people connect to them. There’s no show-off, no unnecessary drama, just raw energy and devotion spilling out in the form of music. It’s the kind of performance that makes you stop scrolling, stop thinking, and simply feel.
As the conversation unfolds, the band members look back on the early days, when they were just a bunch of friends sharing a stage, never imagining that their bond would someday translate into something much bigger. They talk about tiny gigs, last-minute rehearsals, days when things fell apart, and nights when something suddenly clicked. None of it is glorified. They speak the way people speak when they’ve actually lived it, straightforward, sincere, sometimes laughing at their own struggles.
And then there’s their devotion to Lord Shiva, not the kind you flaunt, but the kind that shapes you quietly from within. It comes through in their music, and in the way they talk about their Gurus, their practice, and how certain songs feel less like performances and more like prayers. When they sing Kabir’s “Bhala Hua Meri Matki Phooti” or dive into the rhythm of the “Shiv Tandav Stotram,” you sense that this isn’t just art for them, it’s a way of life.
The conversation also drifts into the behind-the-scenes world that most listeners never get to witness. Their Riyaz routines, the discipline, the stress of perfecting a piece, the unpredictability of live shows, the human side of being a musician. There’s something grounding about the way they share these moments. It reminds you that what looks effortless on stage is actually built over years of persistence, patience, and countless do-overs.
What stands out most is their bond. It’s not dramatic, not exaggerated, it’s simply real. The kind of brotherhood that forms when people trust each other enough to be vulnerable, to fail together, to grow together. You can hear it in their stories, see it in their interactions, and feel it in their music.
By the time they perform “Namo Namo Ji Shankara” and end with “Namah Parvati Pataye – Har Har Mahadev,” the episode no longer feels like an interview. It feels like you’ve just witnessed something personal, a coming together of friendship, faith, and music.
Rahasya’s journey isn’t the typical rise-to-fame story. It’s slower, quieter, more grounded. It’s a reminder that real artistry isn’t built on shortcuts, it’s built on devotion, discipline, and the courage to stay true to what you believe in, even when no one is watching.
And maybe that’s why their music touches people the way it does, because it comes from a place of truth.
To watch the full episode, Click on the link below:
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