Updated on: 06 November, 2020 11:32 AM IST |

Radio City Freedom Recommends Latest Hits by Your Favourite Indie Artistes Edition 22

The names on display require no introduction. All we can tell you is that this is the song that must be included on your party playlist, this festive and wedding season -look at the optimism here. Put on your dancing shoes and get grooving.

A beautiful display of electro-fusion at its best, The Flight by Pune-based Reeshabh Purohit, seeks inspiration from Late Padma Goles Marathi poem, Aakashwedi, inspiring women and men alike to break the chains and fly away free and unhibited. Infusing electronic sounds with the traditional bansuri, we bet you will fall in love with this track at the first listening itself.

Featuring Kasturi Biswas on vocals, Unmesh Chakraborty on bass and backing vocals, Jit Bhunia on guitars and Sunit Sikdar on drums, Kolkata-based rock outfit, Trap Happy offer an old-school rock composition in Laced and Trippin, one out of their six-track album, Cuppa Chaos. The track savours the intoxication of a love that is toxic and consuming in nature. It starts off easy but the arresting drumwork and guitars up the stakes further. Definitely, this is one song that you must instantly get streaming away.

Inspired from the show, Modern Love, What is Love? by New Delhis Dhruv Kapoor is a no-nonsense, unpretentious offering on the complexities of love in the millenial age. The song is the artists first release post the lockdown, following his debut EP, Heartbreak Paradise, earlier this year. Featuring Suyash Gabriel on drums and guitar and Abhishek Sekhri on bass, Dhruvs rendition is easy on the ears and worthy of a listening during a mundane noon.

Stemming from an extremely personal and anxious space replete with loss and longing, music producer and songwriter Nishant Nagar aka Khwaab invites his listeners to a submersive experience with his latest single, Parchayi, which attempts to seek closure to unanswered questions. Accompanied by the versatile vocals of Raghav Meattle, the song continues to linger in your mind, long after youre done listening.

Sambar Soul is Aditi Rameshs comeback to anyone who dares to bracket her music under a genre. The young singer admonishes the idea of labels and categories through her latest single which infuses jazz with RNB, giving a miss to her signature Carnatic renditions. The result is a smooth listening, worth revisiting time and again.

Your weekly listing of the best in the Indian independent music scene is here. Here are our six picks for this week.














