How Folksoul brings marginalised women artistes together

1 hour ago 6
ARTICLE AD BOX
Khashti Devi, Pushpa Devi Taiji, Hemanti Devi and Chandreshekhar Tampta at the BIC concert

Khashti Devi, Pushpa Devi Taiji, Hemanti Devi and Chandreshekhar Tampta at the BIC concert | Photo Credit: Courtesy: BIC

Spotlights come on at the Bangalore International Centre in Bengaluru. Seven artistes, from The Nyoli Ensemble are all set to present Folksoul’s project ‘Sound of Women’. Folk artistes Hemanti Devi, Khasti Devi, Pushpa Devi-Taiji and Chandrashekhar Tamta take the stage along with Shalini Mohan (bass), Charu Hariharan (percussion and vocals) and Krantinaari aka Ashwini Hiremath (rapper and the project curator).

The folk voices carried a raw, earthy timbre — untrained yet powerful and echoed the daily rigours of their lives. In contrast, hip‑hop surged with modern beats and sharp rap verses. Together, the performers formed a chorus of identities. The evening unfolded like a seamless conversation among the artistes and genres.

Published - April 24, 2026 01:13 pm IST

Read Entire Article