Desi students Indianise the a capella. Matthew Schneeberger reports.
A lot can change in a decade.
In 1998, three-year-old Hindi a capella group Penn Masala had begun to make a small name for itself, but almost exclusively within the North American desi community.
Though they'd already mastered their trademark style -- a unique mishmash of different types of music, including Indian film songs, Western pop, R&B and hip hop and Indian classical, with only vocals for instrumentation -- they were still a relatively unknown entity, outside of 'brown' Americans.
"In the beginning, definitely, our initial fans were South Asians living in the US," says Kunal Bajaj, one of the group's founding members.
In 1996, Bajaj and four others, freshmen at the University of Pennsylvania, created the group almost on a whim, and saw their South Asian heritage as a way to make them stick out from the numerous a capella groups already established on campus. Never did they imagine Penn Masala would become an international brand in less than 10 years.
Fast forward to October 2008: Penn Masala was in the White House for Diwali celebrations, performing for US President Barack Obama.
"The White House experience was a unique combination of both South Asian and American cultures," says Ankit Dhir, a 21-year-old senior at U Penn's Wharton School of Business and Penn Masala's current president. "It was totally humbling and a huge honour to perform for the President."
The symbolic moment captured the group's rise. They've traveled the length and breadth of the United States, performing in college towns and concert halls, at small functions and international awards shows. They've released six full-length CDs, including their most recent, No Detours, and their music is available on iTunes. Perhaps most importantly, the group is breaking into the mainstream.
"Today, audiences are often 50, 60, 70 percent non-South Asian. It's amazing," says Bajaj, who now lives and works in New Delhi.
He and co-founder Naveen Wadhera agree that the band truly took off in 1999. That year, they released their first CD, Awaaz, and went to London, where they gave a well-received performance on BBC Radio. In 2000, they performed in New York City's Nassau Coliseum at the Zee Gold Bollywood Awards, and haven't looked back since.
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