iWorld
Trilok drops live rock rendition of Vande Mataram with modern edge
Band reimagines patriotic classic with guitars and raw studio energy
MUMBAI: Trilok has released a new live studio rendition of Vande Mataram, offering a contemporary take on the iconic composition while preserving its original lyrical essence.
Recorded entirely live, the track leans into raw, unfiltered energy, trading polished production for authenticity. While the lyrics remain unchanged, the arrangement introduces a rock-driven soundscape, with prominent guitars and drums adding urgency and momentum to the timeless piece.
The reinterpretation strikes a balance between tradition and modernity. It retains the song’s classical foundation while giving it a sharper, more assertive tone that resonates with today’s listeners. The band’s approach reflects a broader attempt to keep cultural touchstones relevant without diluting their core identity.
Trilok has built a reputation for reworking devotional and spiritual music with a contemporary twist. Previous releases such as Achyutam Keshavam and Shiv Kailasho Ke Vasi have connected strongly with audiences, blending familiarity with innovation.
With this latest release, the band continues to explore the intersection of heritage and modern sound. The new Vande Mataram carries a sense of forward motion, echoing a larger narrative of unity in diversity, while inviting a new generation to engage with a classic in a fresh, powerful way.
e-commerce
Swiggy launches Builders Club to scale AI-led commerce ecosystem
Opens 3 MCP servers, 18 plus APIs for AI agents across food, grocery and dining.
MUMBAI: If apps were appetisers, Swiggy is now cooking up the kitchen itself inviting others to build the menu. Swiggy has announced the launch of Builders Club, a developer-focused programme aimed at turning its commerce stack into an open playground for AI-native innovation. Positioned as the next step after opening up its MCP infrastructure, the initiative shifts Swiggy’s role from platform provider to ecosystem orchestrator.
At launch, Builders Club will offer access to 3 MCP servers and more than 18 API tools spanning food delivery, grocery via Instamart, and dining through Dineout. The idea is simple but ambitious: enable developers, startups and enterprises to build AI agents, copilots and assistants that can perform real-world actions from ordering meals to booking tables.
Unlike a typical API programme, Builders Club is structured as an invite-led ecosystem. Participants apply, are vetted, and then gain access to tools, after which they are expected to build and showcase working integrations. The focus is not just on usage, but on contribution who builds, how they build, and how those integrations scale into deeper partnerships.
Under the hood, the initiative is powered by Amazon Web Services’ AI stack. This includes Amazon Bedrock for model access across providers such as Anthropic, Meta and Mistral AI, AWS Trainium chips promising up to 50 per cent lower training costs and 30–40 per cent better inference performance, and Bedrock AgentCore for framework-agnostic agent development.
A key layer in this ecosystem is “Skills” modular, reusable capabilities designed to help AI agents execute real-world tasks more efficiently. Builders Club acts as the convergence point for these skills, MCP integrations and a forthcoming builders platform, signalling a more structured push towards agentic commerce.
For participants, the pitch extends beyond access. Swiggy is offering live APIs with generous rate limits, direct engineering support, co-branding opportunities and potential growth partnerships for successful use cases. In effect, it is trying to seed an ecosystem where third-party innovation can ride on its infrastructure while feeding back into its core business.
The move comes as platforms globally rethink their role in an AI-first economy. Instead of building every feature in-house, companies are increasingly opening up systems to external developers who can experiment faster and at scale. With Builders Club, Swiggy is betting that the next wave of commerce innovation won’t just be delivered to users, it will be built with them.








