Haq Se Hindustan Concert the first ever Edition Showcases 10 Hip-Hop Stars From Across India
Prabh Deep’s Mind-Blowing Crowdsurfing,
High-Octane Verses in Regional Languages by Swadesi, Stellar Set by The Dharavi
Dream Project and more at the day-long show, presented by Rolling Stone India
and Qyuki at Famous Studios
by Shrutee K/DNS
Mumbai: Around a
stimulating, bright aesthetic of murals and graffiti, the first ever edition of
hip-hop showcase Haq Se Hindustan
concert. Part of Qyuki and Rolling Stone
India’s new property Haq Se Hip Hop,
the gig featured activation from graffiti artist Zake, while inside the studio,
Mumbai poured in for stellar performances from the likes of Swadesi + Bandish Projekt from Mumbai, Khasi Bloodz from Shillong, Prabh Deep from New Delhi, Mumbai’s
multilingual party-starters Dopeadelicz,
Chandigarh’s MC Manmeet Kaur, Mumbai
rap upstart MC Heam, Bengaluru artist Gubbi,
Amravati’s favorite 100RBH and the
incredible budding artists of The
Dharavi Dream Project.
Hosted by RJ
Rohini Ramnathan, #HaqSeHindustan’s first outing was a nationwide showcase
across nine languages. A melting pot of sorts, the concert brought together a
cross-section of Mumbai’s creative fraternity, from composer Salim Merchant to comedians Abish Mathew and Srishti Dixit and
TikTok stars Mr Faisu, Adnaan Shaikh, Hasnain Khan, Faiz Baloch and others.
Several rappers on the bill also spoke about how
hip-hop and music have no language barriers and that it brings people together
no matter where they come from.
One of the
best representatives of how multicultural and binding hip-hop can be, The Dharavi Dream Project made an
unforgettable mark at #HaqSeHindustan. MCs Younglord, Siddhu and Sky
heightened the mood instantly with their “Haq
Se Anthem” about the need for women empowerment. The grassroots showcase
spilled over to the rest of the night, with their dance crews busting a move.
While MC Heam and MC Gubbi collaborated with rising talent such as Void and
Madhura Gowda, Chandigarh/Goa rapper MC Manmeet Kaur infused dub and reggae
into the mix.
It proved to
put the full house in just the right mood for later on. Mumbai crew Dopeadelicz featuring rappers
Dope Daddy and Stony Psyko not only
brought their Mumbai fire to the Haq Se stage but also showcased their
versatility by rapping in Hindi, Marathi and Tamil. Shillong hip-hop
crew Khasi Bloodz and New Delhi’s Punjabi wordsmith Prabh Deep both had
exceptional live bands enhancing their slick production and it’s probably
something we need to see more often in India’s live circuit.
The organizers
of #HaqSeHindustan, Nirmika Singh (Executive Editor, Rolling Stone India) and
Samir Bangara (Co-Founder and MD, Qyuki) took to the stage to highlight their
commitment to promoting local hip-hop. “Hip-hop isn’t just about gullies or fast
cars. It belongs to everyone, and that’s what this concert is about. Hip-hop
humara hai,” said Singh. Added
Bangara, “We created #HaqSeHindustan and #HaqSeHipHop to build a stage for
independent artists. That is our mission and we are thrilled to have the
support of the community.” If
you wanted to be treated to experimental hip-hop fusion, then hip-hop crew Swadesi (featuring MC Mawali and
MC Tod Fod) and seasoned electronica artist Mayur Narvekar aka Bandish
Projekt’s collaborative set was a must-hear. The trio put on a strong showcase with the
usage of konnakol, bass-heavy sounds, clever dynamics and powerful rhythms and
more. They crunched out tracks from their collaborative Katal
Kalaa and Khulle Naagde EPs such as the Indian classical-leaning
“Kar Natak,” the pumping “Ek Se Aanth” and the raucous “Mumbai Aamchi.” Swadesi
also performed a chopped and screwed remix version of their hard-hitting
protest song “The Warli Revolt” which left no one standing still.
In the run-up to the finale,
each of the performing acts of #HaqSeHindustan, who are also the cover stars of
Rolling Stone India’s November special issue, were felicitated with a momento
presented by Salim Merchant, Samir Bangara, Nirmika Singh, Sagar Gokhale (COO,
Qyuki) and Radhakrishnan Nair (Publisher, Editor-in-chief, Rolling Stone
India). #HaqSeHindustan
culminated with an enthralling all-star
cypher where many of the concert performers engaged in a rap battle. The
budding artists of The Dharavi Dream Project stole the cypher with their
spitfire verses and unstoppable energy. The
artists and audience at #HaqSeHindustan was one of the most energetic we’ve
seen in a long time. Clearly, this was the gig Mumbai had been waiting for.
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