Sensational Shweta
When
you listen to Shweta Subram, she sounds as if she has the “it” factor.
If you didn’t know otherwise, you would assume you were listening to a
professional Bollywood singer. You would notice that she has an Arabic
fluttery crooning quality and that her voice has a tenacious tone, like
she has been doing this for years. In his book Outliers, Malcolm
Gladwell has claimed that the Beatles would not have had their
distinctive sound had they not played for literally 10,000 hours in
European clubs. Well, Subram has definitely clocked her ten thousand,
what with touring with Alka Yagnik in Canada, accompanying Atif Aslam
and Sukhbir in India, and doing the Navaratri Dandiya nights for BIG
92.7 (Gujarat, India).
Subram catapulted into North American fame in June 2011 by performing with current Bollywood reigning music idols Salim-Sulaiman at the International Indian Film Academy (IIFA) Rocks in Toronto event and headlining the IIFA Buzz event in Markham. She sang the number “Khuda Ke Liye” from the movie Aazaan, originally sung by Shraddha Pandit.
Subram’s single “Ajooba” sounds like a “Laila Mein Laila” (from the
movie Qurbani) meets Alisha Chinoy’s “Made in India,” and is captivating
for its mix of Bollywood glitter, sudden Indian-classical treatments,
and effortless rendition. It also features Canadian rapper, singer, and
song-writer Richilous. Subram’s debut single “Jee Le Live Life” has a
similar “in” vibe, with the right mix of young sound and mature
execution on vocals. She’s working on some more tracks for a debut
album, while setting her sights on a career in playback singing in
India—not just in Bollywood, but the larger canvas of Indian cinema,
since Subram can sing in Tamil, Kannada, Bengali and other languages as
well. That should give her some elbow room in an industry that is
forever reinventing its music.
Ajooba and other songs available on www.shwetasubram.com




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