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Not everyone can learn to play an ancient instrument like the Rudra veena. Fewer still manage to build it from scratch. Meet the tax officer who has turned a room in his SoBo home into a raga lab

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Suvir Misra is a 1993-batch IRS officer, currently posted in Mumbai as Commissioner of Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST) & Central Excise. Pic/ Pradeep Dhivar

Suvir Misra is a 1993-batch IRS officer, currently posted in Mumbai as Commissioner of Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST) & Central Excise. Pic/ Pradeep Dhivar

Suvir Misra credits his mother for his passion and his brother for his career. We are in the studio of his Malabar Hill home which has been converted into a workshop for veena making.

"I was inclined towards music since childhood," says the 1993-batch Indian Revenue Service (IRS) officer currently posted in Mumbai as the Commissioner of Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST) & Central Excise. His father, says Misra, was worried about his future. "I had been devoting more time to learning the rudra veena [than to academics]. Fortunately, my mother was supportive," he says about the instrument that's considered one of the oldest, and even finds a mention in Vedic texts.

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