A new instrumental release is drawing attention for placing the baritone ukulele—an often overlooked member of the instrument’s family—at the centre of a cross-genre musical project. The baritone ukulele, introduced in the late 1940s, differs from the more common soprano and tenor variants in both tuning and tonal range. Closer in sound to a classical guitar, it allows for greater harmonic depth, but has rarely been used as the primary instrument in genre-spanning compositions. The seven-track project attempts to push that boundary. Each composition is structured around a distinct musical style, moving across Western Classical, Flamenco, World Folk, Bossa Nova, Indian Classical, Gypsy Jazz and Blues. Rather than presenting these as standalone experiments, the tracks are arranged to create a continuous, shifting soundscape. The classical-inspired opening leans on structured phrasing, while the Flamenco segment introduces sharper rhythmic patterns. Folk and Latin influences bring in melodic variation, before the project moves into Indian Classical-inspired arrangements marked by slower, more meditative passages. The latter half shifts again, incorporating elements of Gypsy Jazz improvisation and ending on a Blues-driven note. What stands out is the consistent use of the baritone ukulele across these transitions. Instead of adapting the instrument to fit a single genre, the compositions test how far its tonal range can stretch across contrasting styles. The project comes at a time when independent musicians are increasingly experimenting with hybrid forms and non-traditional lead instruments. In that context, the use of the baritone ukulele as a central voice marks a departure from its conventional role. The release is the debut effort of multi-instrumentalist Prajna Dutta, who uses the format to explore the instrument’s range across traditions while keeping the compositions rooted in narrative and mood. While cross-genre experimentation is not new, such projects continue to reflect a broader shift in how instrumental music is being approached—less bound by format, and more open to blending influences across regions and styles.