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She sounds unbothered by the fact that she was tipped as “one to watch” by various publications at the beginning of the year.
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Raveena structured the album just so, with the intention that it would pay homage to her South Asian history, intersecting with western culture: “Starting with really upbeat, colourful, sensual, free songs and then ending on introspective and spiritual ones.”
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While Asha’s Awakening begins with the rhythmic stirrings of “Rush” and the sultry hip-hop allure of “Secret”, it ends with a 15-minute-long guided meditation, “Let Your Breath Become a Flower”.
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Then her voice is a prayer, a soft whisper – recounting nights of celestial highs – the sound of peace. Once she realises “Time Flies”, the heroine of Asha’s Awakening emerges healed from the “heartbreak of growing out of people” and “the trauma of abuse”. Stronger basslines thump to the beat of her protagonist’s wild heart, crescendoing until the album’s halfway point, when the energy turns contemplative. Raveena’s falsetto rings clear, as it always has, but she also utters swooning sighs on “Kismet”, along with quietly confident verses delivered in Hindi, and experiments with Indian instruments such as the harp-like swaramandal. It’s a sound that peppers the album, simmering alongside influences from celebrated Indian musicians such as RD Burman and Asha Bhosle, and pioneering female jazz artists Alice Coltrane and Asha Puthli.
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“‘You made an album that’s so nuanced, and complex, and has so many different facets to it, and layers, and you spent so many years working on it. “One of my closest friends said this really beautiful thing,” she recalls. After two EPs and a debut album, 2019’s Lucid, she felt confident enough to commit to music that is eleborate, yes, but not impenatrable. “Obviously it’s a bit more challenging for listeners, but I also think they want to be challenged, and experience art that lives outside consumable soundbites,” she says. Does she worry this could alienate potential fans? Not at all. She’s someone, she says, who “hasn’t existed in mainstream pop music” before. Raveena is a queer, South Asian, female artist who straddles themes of spirituality and sexuality.