When the National Anthem Becomes a Ringtone: The Troubling Arc of SBI General’s Sound Symphony

Vertical collage juxtaposing vintage and modern Indian scenes, blending black-and-white Doordarshan-era motifs with contemporary images inspired by SBI General’s Sound Symphony campaign.

As India prepares to mark its 78th Independence Day, SBI General Insurance—a subsidiary of State Bank of India, the nation’s largest public sector undertaking—commissioned Sneha Khanwalkar to create something rather extraordinary. The result was “Sound Symphony,” a sonic reimagining of the national anthem that traced India’s journey from 1947 to the present through carefully curated sounds: the whistle of steam engines morphing into the chime of UPI notifications, the crackle of transistor radios giving way to smartphone alerts. On paper, it sounds ambitious, even inspired. In execution, it reveals something far more troubling about contemporary Indian advertising and our relationship with cultural heritage—particularly when a government-owned institution with 500 million customers appropriates the national anthem for commercial purposes.

The Doordarshan Echo

Watching SBI General’s latest offering, one cannot escape the uncanny sensation of déjà vu. There’s something distinctly reminiscent of those earnest patriotic campaigns that once graced Doordarshan in the late 1980s and early 1990s—Mile Sur Mera Tumhara (1988), celebrating linguistic diversity; Ek Chidiya Anek Chidiya, teaching unity; Hamara Bajaj, selling mobility with “Buland Bharat ki Buland Tasveer“; Nirma‘s “Doodh si safedi.” Those campaigns possessed authentic naïveté, reflecting rather than manufacturing cultural aspirations.

The Public Sector Paradox

What makes SBI General’s appropriation particularly troubling is its status as a subsidiary of India’s largest public sector bank. State Bank of India, with 57.51 percent government ownership, 500 million customers, and 23 percent market share, is owned by every Indian taxpayer.

This creates a unique paradox: a publicly-owned institution manufacturing patriotic sentiment to sell commercial products to the very citizens who, as taxpayers and depositors, already own the parent company.

The Commodification Paradox

The decision to appropriate the national anthem as raw material for corporate messaging represents particularly aggressive cultural colonisation when executed by a PSU subsidiary.

The Sonic Branding Dilemma

When a government-owned bank’s subsidiary engages in sonic appropriation of the national anthem, it adds layers of institutional betrayal to commercial cynicism. Unlike commercial jingles, the anthem carries profound emotional weight precisely because it exists outside commerce.

The Authenticity Trap

SBI General exemplifies how PSU subsidiaries exploit their institutional legitimacy to blur lines between public service and commercial marketing.

The Independence Day Industrial Complex

For PSU subsidiaries like SBI General, participation in the annual patriotic advertising ritual creates unique contradictions. Unlike private companies contributing as corporate citizens, PSUs already serve public interest through their core mandate.

The Regulatory Vacuum

Unlike private companies facing various restrictions, PSU subsidiaries operate in a grey area where public ownership grants implicit cultural authority whilst commercial objectives drive aggressive marketing tactics—a regulatory gap that demands urgent attention.

Looking Forward: The Price of Progress

For PSUs, the stakes are particularly high. These institutions were created to serve public interest, not compete with private sector marketing sophistication. When they prioritise brand building over public service, they risk undermining the very legitimacy that justifies their continued existence in India’s mixed economy.

For a nation still grappling with the proper role of state-owned enterprises in a market economy, the Sound Symphony campaign serves as a cautionary tale about what happens when public institutions lose sight of their primary mandate in pursuit of commercial success.

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