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regular-article-logo Sunday, 22 December 2024

AP Dhillon: 'We, as a brown community, are getting the light that we deserve'

The musician, a rising global star in the hip-hop scene, is the focus of the Prime video documentary AP Dhillon: First of A Kind.

PTI Mumbai Published 23.08.23, 10:02 AM
AP Dhillon.

AP Dhillon. Instagram

India-born Canadian artiste AP Dhillon, a rising global star in the hip-hop scene with songs such as "Brown Munde", "Excuses" and "Summer High", believes the brown community is finally getting the appreciation it deserves.

The musician, whose journey from Punjab's Gurdaspur to Vancouver in Canada to finally tasting popularity is the subject of a new documentary series, "AP Dhillon: First of A Kind", said he is proud that the world is taking note of the music created by Indians residing in Canada and the US.

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"We, as a brown community, are getting the light, the appreciation that we deserve, and that our culture is moving forward, like hip-hop music... I don't think the world took us seriously before, and now they are.

"The music coming from India or the Indian people, who are in Canada or in States, is getting recognised. It is amazing to see all these artists now doing different things, trying independently... So it gave people hope that, 'If he can do it, I can do it too'," Dhillon told PTI in an interview here.

The musician, 30, whose real name is Amritpal Singh Dhillon, moved to Canada in 2015 for his post-graduation course in Business Administration and Management. For about four years, he did odd jobs like working at gas stations and convenience stores, a detail that also features in his 2020 hit "Brown Munde".

While music was always his passion, he initially wanted to become a basketball player.

"Before this I just wanted to be a basketball player. When I moved to Canada, I was in survival mode. I salute all the students who go there. They work so hard, they go there from such a different culture. They try to fit in, there is pressure of working, making money, and going to school.

"Sometimes you forget about your dreams, you just want to survive. But we didn't stop. Music was always my passion. I wanted to make music, I loved singing, and playing guitar here and there," he said.

While there is no single track that drew him towards becoming a singer, Dhillon said he counts Punjabi icons Jitender Sartaj, Amar Singh Chamkila and Sidhu Moosewala as well as maestro A R Rahman and singer Arijit Singh among his inspirations.

"I used to listen to artist tracks, I would listen to a lot of Punjabi artists like Jitender Sartaj, Garry Sandhu, Amar Singh Chamkila, they are legends, Gurdip Mann. I used to listen to all sorts of music... There've been some great artists, like so many... Arjit Singh, AR Rahman, Siddhu was amazing. There is a lot of old music. So, a lot of these artists inspire," he added.

Shinda Kahlon, Dhillon's label mate under their Canada-based Run-Up Records who also sat down for the interview, said he had an inkling about the growing popularity of Punjabi music.

"When we started, Punjabi music was on the rise, everybody had a general sense of how it was growing up, and we thought we can make something too. So that's how we started," Kahlon said.

The four-part documentary series is currently streaming on Prime Video.

Watching his journey on screen made him "emotional", Dhillon said.

“With the documentary, we just wanted to create something, which helps other artists and other people, who are starting out and are trying to do similar things, and they have this brown print to follow...

"It is just like keep doing it, pushing it more and more, just experimenting with our sounds, and giving fans what they want. That's the goal, keep doing what we are doing." Asked if he has received offers from the Hindi film industry for a collaboration, the singer, whose documentary premiere in Mumbai saw the presence of Hindi film industry stars such as Salman Khan and Ranveer Singh, said there were many but the timing was an issue.

"Whenever we feel right, we will do it. But so many times we have been offered but we didn't get time to do it. Whenever we feel right for a certain movie, like it goes with our image and sound... We just don't want to force it," he added.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.)

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