Thursday, December 20, 2007

Your Dil


Your Dil
Author: Hina Shereen Thu Dec 20, 2007

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I was truly impressed with the lavish gala thrown last month on November 16th by the Your Dil Foundation, Youth Outreach in Developments in Literacy. It was Pakistani high society strutting their stuff in masquerade at the Broad Street Ballroom.



Manhattansociety.com was there flashing the bulb while honoree Mohammed Naqvi, producer of the documentary “Shame” spoke and a tissue dancer performed. Around twenty-five thousand dollars were raised that night from a live auction to fund Your Dil’s quest to fight illiteracy through the opening of a new “dil” school in Sehala near Islamabad. They are funding different schools and give support to different organizations created to help in the battle for stronger and more available education in Pakistan.

Current president and founder of the junior charity of DIL, Samar Shaheryar says near 10,000 schools were destroyed from the Earthquake in 2005 and one major project that Your Dil supports with its annual funds is the Mansehra project in NWFP that was created specifically in response to the earthquake. But YD’s local mission is getting Pakistani youth involved on all levels with what is happening in the motherland. Shaheryar says “we’ve done a tremendous job in expansion as an organization …I imagine we will continue to expand…the main thing is I would really like to see the young people play a bigger role in the planning, organization and work that goes on in Pakistan…and getting involved in every way: hands on.” Shaheryar knows that young Desi Americans have a lot to offer coming from different fields and walks of life and can add a lot of heart and value to this cause and eventually overcome it…and she knows that they don’t want to go to their parents’ fundraiser…“It’s the first Pakistani charity to target young people in New York…even now we are, people know they are coming out and not hanging out with their parents, they will be hanging with people their own age and still donating to a good cause.”

Many attendees commented that the gala felt more festive and chic than many trendy fundraising galas that happen in New York every year. It is almost breathtaking to see the energy that comes out when people know they can actually do something about all the problems they read about and hear their family members remorse over that are happening thousands of miles away. Illiteracy in Pakistan and the low education rates are internally hurting the politically controversial country immensely and organizations like this that are raising money and bringing awareness to Pakistanis all over the world are pivotal for the salvation of the minds of future generations of poor Pakistani children. But Shaheryar wants people to get involved in a more intimate way, “I encourage people to go and visit these schools we are creating when they are in Pakistan.” The money that comes into YD is not separated; thousands go in annually to the functioning of many schools: computer labs, teacher training, safe construction, tuition. “The main thing is that young people have a distinct voice and something great to offer for Pakistan, enthusiasm and working and being in a multicultural environment, show up and do such hard work for something happening far away,” Shaheryar says.


YD has helped to raise the literacy rate to seventy percent in the township of Orangi, Pakistan.


This completely non-profit organizations has sparked the interest of many young Pakistani and non-Pakistani professionals alike (who makes up one-third of the members) from all over the United States. Your Dil has chapters in New York, Boston, Chicago, Washington DC and San Francisco. Check out yourdil.org to get involved.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

R&B and Pop Sensation R




Ranjini becomes cover Girl for NirvanaWoman Magazine ! R&B and Pop Sensation


R&B and pop-Singer Ranjini


The music video for the new single titled “This Guy” may not seem out of the ordinary. Of course, the beautiful, gyrating bodies and pitch-perfect voices require extraordinary effort, but a decade after the Latin explosion, the sight of brown skin no longer stops admirers in their tracks. But take a closer look. The midriff-baring top paired with jeans is none other than a traditional sari blouse. A hip-hop dance sequence shows flashes of classical Indian steps. And the large, almond-shaped eyes dominant on the singer’s face are undeniably Indian.


Singer Ranjini Ettigi is poised to make her mark on the R&B and pop-music scene in a way no other South Asian has before. A native of Richmond, Virginia, she started vocal training with her mother at the tender age of five. “My mother trained me in the Carnatic music tradition from a young age,” Ranjini says. However, her training in traditional Indian arts did not end there. Ranjini also mastered the veena, a classical Indian instrument similar to the sitar, and learned to dance bharatnatyam, an ancient dance tradition hailing from Ranjini’s native South India. And her love of music inspired her to learn the piano on her own before her parents decided to invest in formal training.
Ranjini admires a variety of contemporary music icons—Mariah Carey, Aaliyah and Stevie Wonder, to name a few—but acknowledges her mother as a dominant force in her early love for music. “The Carnatic tradition gave me control over my voice in a way that I did not realize would make the acrobatic parts of singing, like different runs that are a part of R&B, easier to learn,” Ranjini explains.Indeed, gaining control over her voice allowed Ranjini to start imitating her legendary music idols, like Whitney Houston, and participate in her school choir and shows.

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Monday, August 13, 2007

Singer-Songwriter Ananda Sen Releases A Song Every Week, For Fifty-Two Weeks Straight

published by Nirvanastyle.com

From Rupa Dev Sat Aug 11, 2007
Singer-Songwriter Ananda Sen Releases A Song Every Week, For Fifty-Two Weeks Straight
by Senior Writer Rupa Dev


It’s around 11 p.m. on a Tuesday night when I decide to ring singer-songwriter Ananda Sen, an unusual time for an interview. But I’m not worried about calling too late because I just received an email from him which reads, “I’ll be up really late tonight so can call me anytime at 1-800-I-can’t-believe-I-committed-to-doing-a-song-every-week-what-was-I-thinking.”

On this particular night, Ananda’s mind is clouded by a combination of writer’s block, deadlines, and a bit of sleep deprivation. And sleep isn’t in the near future. If anything, Ananda’s night is just getting started. “The bassist and keyboardist are coming in tomorrow to record,” he explains. “So I’m going to be up all night writing this song.” After pausing briefly, Ananda sheepishly admits, “I actually have no idea what I am going to write about.”

We decide to speak again on Thursday, and though Ananda is as friendly and charismatic as before, I can trace the fatigue hanging behind his every word. When asked if he’s feeling tired, he responds, “I actually haven’t slept in 36 hours because I was recording all last night. Between the time I talked to you on Tuesday and yesterday evening, three different songs were in incubation in my head, and by midnight, I forced myself to just choose one.”

That’s the second all-nighter Ananda has pulled in three days. But to anyone familiar with the lifestyle of a musician, perpetual writer's block and late-night (rather, all-night) recording sessions are nothing out of the ordinary. Then again, these all-nighters aren’t a one (two or three) time deal. In June 2007, Ananda pledged to write, record, produce, and post one free mp3 song on his website, every week, for 52 weeks straight.


The first week of September marks the beginning of just week ten, and the enormity of Ananda’s undertaking is clear.

But Ananda is determined to defy the skeptics:“It’s amazing what you can pull off when you set a seemingly unrealistic goal. Everybody thought it would be kind of a disaster, so that made me want to do this more.”

“Everybody” doesn’t just refer to friends and family; it includes a wealth of well-respected professionals, artists, record producers, entertainers, and entrepreneurs. Though Ananda may be an unknown to most music listeners, he’s no stranger to the music industry.

Born into “a very musical” family and raised in New Jersey, Ananda starting his singing career at the early age of three— singing and playing tabla alongside his older sister on stage. Chuckling lightly, Ananda knowingly points out, “We’re Bengali, so we sing and dance and do all those artsy things.”

Ananda dazzled audiences at talent shows and school choir performances. While honing his fondness for classic rock music, he became the lead singer of a few bands in high school, a transition his parents weren’t particularly “thrilled" about. But Ananda eventually gave up rock bands and headed to the University of Pennsylvania, where his vocal training and knack for musical arrangement made him an essential asset to campus a capella groups.

“My sophomore year, a bunch of guys wanted to start an a capella group, but quickly realized that they didn’t really know much about a cappella music,” he remembers. “So they asked me to help them out, and I ended up re-auditioning everybody, arranging the music, and teaching them how to sing.”

Penn Masala, the world's first Hindi a capella group, was born that year,with Ananda serving as the founding Music Director. Together, the founding members established the framework for what would evolve into one of the most popular musical groups within the South Asian Diaspora.

It’s easy to detect Ananda’s modesty, as he bashfully grazes over the professional and academic achievements most people would boast about: a B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania, a JD from Stanford University, and jobs in radio promotion and law with major as well as independent record companies (Capitol, Hollywood, and Century Media). Ananda had even started his own record company with his former Capitol Records boss, putting out two albums, before eventually calling it quits.

He explains, “Traditionally, lawyers have been pretty influential in the music industry, so I figured getting my law degree would help me start a record company.”

On paper, Ananda has achieved all the professional goals he has pursued, but on the inside, something has always felt missing. “I was pursuing all of these careers that side-stepped what I really wanted to do,” he reflects. It was shortly after this realization that Ananda decided to quit his job as general counsel at an independent record label to pursue music full time.

Though originally a vocalist, Ananda has evolved into a multi-faceted, multi-talented musician whose reach ranges from playing a handful of instruments (“tabla, keyboard, guitar, whatever I could get my hands on”), to writing and producing all his own music (“I spend all of my disposable income on recording equipment"), to learning all of the necessary engineering and technology (“I sat for literally six hours last Sunday reading music software manuals").

Citing musical influences like Sting and Led Zeppelin, Ananda’s music is an eclectic blend of worldly influences, combining beats and rhythms from various regions of the world with his soulful, soothing voice. Some songs are slow and emotional ballads, like “Live Forever.” Others songs have a more reggae feel, like Week Three’s “Haunting You,” or even a Latin flair like Week One’s “Overthrown.” In “Set Me Free” (off Ananda’s debut EP), Ananda melds the influences of East and West by using hypnotic bhangra beats to compliment a fast-paced, upbeat melody. And yet while Ananda’s music is versatile enough to jump from one genre to the next, his songwriting and voice stay consistent and complementary to one another (even when he sings a few lines, impromptu style, during the interview). His lyrics are comprised of versatile, deeply insightful verses, and complex rhyme schemes. But above all else, when Ananda sings, his sound is so natural and soul-felt that you can’t help but wonder how he ever considered pursuing any other profession.

“One day, you wake up, and it all just seems so simple,” Ananda confesses. “I had built my entire life around music—I spent thousands of dollars on recording software and equipment and musical instruments for making my own music. So at some point, I asked myself, ‘So, is this a hobby or a profession?’ Because if a ‘hobby’ consumes all your time and money—then is it still just a hobby?”

The answer seems self-evident. Ananda’s philosophical realization triggered a whirlwind of events, which included quitting his job and shooting two music videos. “I figured,” he says. “if I’m going to actually do this, then why not go at it in a spectacular and all-consuming way.”

And by spectacular, Ananda isn’t referring to all of the glitz and glam that most star-studded musicians dream about; he’s talking about his commitment to write and record one song a week for one entire year-a completely innovative approach to making music these days. “This project doesn’t really make any sense because I’m not making any money off of it,” he explains from a very practical standpoint. His motives are simple and straightforward. Ananda wants to establish a connection with listeners and doesn’t believe that the traditional route of putting a CD out every two years can do so.

“It’s boring to have a website that says, ‘come back next week for a new tour date or screensaver to download.’ A website should have something new for the listener every week, like a television show,” outlines Ananda.

Inadvertently, Ananda’s music venture reflects ”the real-time phenomena” of today: from blogs to instant messaging, reality television to webcams. Now you can add weekly music downloads to that list. While most artists rewrite and rehearse until they have recorded a perfect song, Ananda only has seven days. “A week is just about enough time to write and record a “studio-quality” song,” says Ananda. “I haven’t pre-recorded any songs, so I don’t have any buffer, and each week I’m putting together the song for that week itself."
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