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KC Sen: The War Correspondent Who Orchestrated a Cultural Renaissance

Amidst the chaos of World War II, a resilient visionary built Kolkata's music scene from the ground up.

Foreign PolicyPublished April 17, 2026 at 11:01 PMProcessed April 18, 2026 at 12:49 PM
KC Sen

While Japanese air raids rattled 1940s Calcutta, Kumar Chunder Sen—known as KC Sen—refused to let the drums of war silence the music. A man of remarkable versatility, Sen served as a war correspondent on the Burmese front, where he narrowly escaped death when shrapnel struck his helmet, yet he never abandoned his commitment to the arts.

Even while dodging sirens to record music for the East India War Fund, Sen demonstrated the kind of grit and entrepreneurial spirit that would eventually transform Kolkata’s cultural landscape. After the war, Sen leveraged his experience as a bandleader and multi-instrumentalist to professionalize the city's nightlife.

He founded the Calcutta Swing Club and, in 1953, launched Band Wagon, a pioneering talent agency that turned local venues into legitimate platforms for emerging performers.

Through his weekly Sunday auditions and annual showcases, Sen provided a critical launchpad for young musicians, effectively creating a thriving live music circuit where none had existed before.

His influence reached far beyond the stage, extending into the film industry where he famously connected filmmaker Satyajit Ray with talent for the acclaimed movie Mahanagar. Sen’s legacy is one of personal responsibility and vision; he recognized talent and possessed the drive to turn it into something substantial.

From his early days as a champion athlete to his final radio broadcast in 1975, Sen remained a steadfast force for cultural development, proving that even in the shadow of global conflict, a determined individual can build a lasting institution.

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foreign-policyhistorykolkatamusicworld-war-ii

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