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    Home»Lifestyle»“Sometimes You Have to Leave Empty Spaces”: A Conversation with Ameet Shetye on His Instrumental Track The Zephyr
    Lifestyle

    “Sometimes You Have to Leave Empty Spaces”: A Conversation with Ameet Shetye on His Instrumental Track The Zephyr

    Arjun SinghBy Arjun SinghMarch 2, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    New Delhi [India], March 02: Composer and guitarist Ameet Shetye, whose earlier compositions have been sung by celebrated voices like Udit Narayan and Shankar Mahadevan, has taken a deeply personal turn with his latest instrumental release, The Zephyr. In this candid conversation, he reflects on the journey behind the piece and the emotion that shaped it.

    Q: When you think back to the time you created The Zephyr, who were you emotionally in that phase of your life?

    It began one fine December evening — Christmas Eve, to be precise. I came up with the intro riff on an electric guitar. At that time, it was just a feeling, just a phrase. Over the years, that tune slowly came into life and evolved into what you now hear in the solo guitar version. Emotionally, I was in a quiet, reflective space.

    Q: There’s a quiet sensitivity in this track. Was there something you were feeling but not saying out loud?

    As I started composing it further, I gradually imagined a misty morning. That imagery shaped the tune. Naturally, it became ethereal and open — almost like something ringing in your head. It wasn’t about saying something directly. It was about creating a feeling.

    Q: The word The Zephyr suggests a soft breeze. Was the song meant to be gentle?

    Yes — a gentle breeze. That’s exactly what it represents. The idea was softness, lightness, and subtle movement rather than intensity.

    Q: Did you ever hesitate about releasing something so personal?

    I make music that is quite personal anyway. There is no holding back. I create what I experience and feel — it’s always inside out.

    Q: Was there a specific setting that inspired the full composition?

    Once I discovered the riff, I imagined a situation that helped me build the piece further. The concept behind The Zephyr is very visual for me.

    I see myself in a treehouse, wrapped in a misty morning breeze. Sunlight slowly leans in and gently wakes my muse from an eternal slumber. In that moment, time dissolves. Music finds me before I even reach for it.

    That’s how the tune flowed.

    Q: The track is just a single acoustic guitar. Why keep it so minimal?

    The whole thing is raw. Usually, musicians add layers, instruments, arrangements — I’ve done that in the past too. I could have added synth pads or keys. But sometimes you just have to leave empty spaces. Just one acoustic guitar, yet it fills the sound spectrum on its own.

    Q: Did creating The Zephyr change you as an artist?

    Yes. It made me experiment with the concept of singularity. Earlier, I would compose for multiple instruments and build arrangements. Suddenly, it was just one guitar and a simple tune. That simplicity taught me something new.

    Q: What do you hope listeners feel when they hear it alone, maybe with headphones on?

    When I create an instrumental tune, it’s my journey. When someone listens to it, it becomes theirs. It might take them to a past memory, a journey, an intimate moment — the possibilities are limitless.

    Q: Has anyone’s reaction stayed with you?

    Yes. A friend once listened to it at sunrise and described exactly the same feeling I had imagined while composing it. That stayed with me.

    Q: If The Zephyr were a chapter in your life story, what would it be called?

    “You are all by yourself.”

    With The Zephyr, Ameet Shetye returns to pure instrumental expression — not with grandeur, but with stillness. A gentle breeze, carried on six strings.

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    Arjun Singh
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