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With a fusion of tradition and hip-hop, a ‘Punjabi wave’ sweeps Canada

From Coachella stages to Spotify playlists, a “Punjabi wave” is surging across the international music scene. Its creators, mostly Sikhs from northwestern India, mix traditional music with the hip-hop, rap, and pop beats of North America. And Canada-based musicians are leading the way.

The genre is buoyed by the country’s swelling Indian population, as well as a growing willingness among white audiences to listen to foreign-language music, says MacEwan University professor Sara Grewal. 

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Music can make a community feel heard – not just literally, but figuratively, too. The rise of a “Punjabi wave” in international music is helping the Indian diaspora in Canada feel recognized in a new way.

Canada has the largest percentage of Sikhs outside Punjab, and many Punjabi singers came to the country as international students. Some see the Punjabi wave as a vehicle for keeping immigrants and second-generation Indians connected to their homeland.

Kavita Saini, who was born to Indian parents in small-town British Columbia, says Punjabi music wasn’t something she used to hear on mainstream airwaves. But recently, she and more than 50,000 others flocked to Vancouver to see Punjabi singer Diljit Dosanjh perform live.

“Now the music has blown up and it’s like, we’re getting known,” says Ms. Saini. It’s her 9-year-old son’s first concert, the largest Punjabi show ever played outside India. “There is so much talent, so I’m just proud of us.”

“Get ready to experience the biggest Punjabi artist on the planet of all time,” the voice booms across the darkened stadium.

The sold-out crowd, over 50,000 in all, roars as the lights go up and Diljit Dosanjh takes the Vancouver stage. He’s dressed in all black – from his turban, to tunic, to tinted sunglasses – except for a pair of red Nike high-tops.

And if the audacious welcome message – calling the audience the “special chosen ones” about to “witness history” – seems over the top, Mr. Dosanjh does indeed make history. The first leg of his North American tour that runs across Canada and the U.S. into the summer is touted as the largest Punjabi show ever played outside India.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Music can make a community feel heard – not just literally, but figuratively, too. The rise of a “Punjabi wave” in international music is helping the Indian diaspora in Canada feel recognized in a new way.

It’s a dazzling expression of the “Punjabi wave” surging across the international music scene. Its creators, mostly Sikhs from northwestern India, mix traditional music with the hip-hop, rap, and pop beats of North America. And Canada-based musicians are leading the way. It’s a nod to the remarkable Punjabi immigration story – with all its complexities – across this country.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff

The audience reacts to Mr. Dosanjh at his sold-out show, the largest concert ever by a Punjabi artist outside India with more than 54,000 seats sold.

“This is the Punjabi wave. Nobody ever thought somebody would come and sell out BC [Place] Stadium,” says Robyn Sandhu, who came to Canada from India as an international student in 2017 and is now a hip-hop singer penning Punjabi lyrics from Surrey, British Columbia. “They’d say, ‘What are you talking about?’ It’s just crazy.”

The Canadian dream

Punjabi hip-hop, rap, and pop is definitely having a moment. In April, Canada-based Punjabi rapper AP Dhillon performed at the Coachella music festival, after Mr. Dosanjh became the first Punjabi artist to take the California stage last year. In March, Punjabi rapper Karan Aujla, based in British Columbia, took home the 2024 Fan Choice Award at Canada’s annual JUNO Awards. According to Spotify, consumption of music from India has shot up worldwide by 2,000% in the past five years.

Kavita Saini, who was born to Indian parents in small-town British Columbia, says Punjabi music was once something she heard only at weddings or inside her home, not on mainstream airwaves.

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