Gonojowar, Aux4D, Melody Lane and more are driving this grassroots movement with their fusion of Bangla lyrics with rock and metal sounds.
And yet, paradoxically, Bangladeshi music now travels farther than ever before. Independent artists and bands—from Pritom Hasan and Masha to Ashes and Bangla Five—are gaining international visibility.
Without these cultural interventions, it is hard to imagine how the world might have recognised our struggle as its own. Art endures because it does what politics alone cannot: it fixes memory, ...
Bangladesh is a five-time Grammy award winning hitmaker to the stars. On music’s biggest night, he knows, it’s all about who ...
Bangladesh, Nov. 12 -- Bangladeshi expatriates, along with the Saudi audience, enjoyed a vibrant celebration of Bangladeshi heritage on Tuesday night (KSA time) as the 'Bangladesh Culture' segment of ...
Armed with an infectious sample and trunk slapping bass, Lil Wayne's "A Milli" is not only one of Weezy's biggest songs, but also one of the definitive songs of its era. The man credited with ...
Cutting across faiths, ethnicities and classes, Bangladeshi people are mourning Andrew Kishor, one of the country’s most popular and prolific singers for nearly four decades. Kishor, 65, a member of ...
For more than three decades, Ruma Brizita Biswas had sung several popular liturgical and devotional songs with incorrect notations and lyrics because nobody taught her the correct versions. “One of my ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results