Arooj Aftab, the Grammy-winning Pakistani singer serenading Coachella

Pakistani vocalist Arooj Aftab poses for a portrait at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California, on April 15, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 18 April 2022
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Arooj Aftab, the Grammy-winning Pakistani singer serenading Coachella

  • Aftab sees a revolution in popular music, with artists sailing freely past genre and borders
  • 'Whatever makes my heart sing is in the music,' say the 37-year-old Pakistani artist

INDIO, United States: Fresh off of her historic Grammy win, the Brooklyn-based Pakistani singer Arooj Aftab has added another feather to her cap with a debut at the much-touted Coachella music festival.

She graced the California desert with a set that centered her melodious Urdu lyricism, a barrier-breaking move as she became the first Pakistani to play the prestigious festival.

For Aftab, the language barrier no longer exists: "This is a door that's opened."

The 37-year-old -- who just released a cover of Spanish flamenco revisionist Rosalia's "Di mi nombre" -- sees a revolution in popular music, with artists sailing freely past genre and borders.

"There's a movement happening in the music industry at large," she told AFP on the grounds of Coachella, where she delivered a moving performance of her work that fuses ancient Sufi traditions with inflections of folk, jazz and minimalism.

"The audience and the musicians are creating music and the audiences are listening to music with a lot of freedom in their minds. Less genre-genre, less border-border," she said.

"It's so free, and open, and really, really beautiful."

She credits the Latinx community for making huge inroads in this respect, citing Rosalia along with Becky G, Karol G, J. Balvin and Bad Bunny as influential in the transformation.

"The trap movement definitely changed the way listeners listen," Aftab said, referring to the explosion of Southern US hip hop that later made its way into Latin America and fused with reggaeton.

The surge of Latin music on US airwaves and especially on streaming platforms "created a big opening in the minds of listeners in America," she continued.

"They now listen to music that they don't understand, and it's fine! They love it. That's a big step."

Aftab said that opening has allowed her to feel more liberated with her own creations, putting out music based on emotions, without limitation.

"It's a personal music," she said. "It's not 'my country, my country' -- it's global music. It's everything that we feel, it's all the people that we meet."

"Whatever makes my heart sing is in the music."

With three studio albums, Aftab mere weeks ago made history in becoming the first Pakistani solo vocalist to nab a Grammy, winning for her song "Mohabbat" in the Best Global Performance category.

She was also nominated in the prestigious Best New Artist field -- although that award went, as expected, to pop sensation Olivia Rodrigo.

But Aftab is basking in the moment of recognition, savoring her career accolades as well as her two performance dates at the premier Coachella festival.

"It feels really amazing, it's a high -- it's a high moment in my career," the singer said. "I've been working towards this moment and imagining that this moment would come, or not."

"And it did! Which is miraculous."

She's also stoked to be back in front of live audiences, with Coachella returning after a three-year, pandemic-induced hiatus.

Featuring artists from all over the world, the 2022 Coachella poster is a reflection of music's globalization and genre fluidity.

For Aftab, that's a big win: "This is a door that's opened, for sure."

"And I'm going to leave the door open, for sure."


Pakistan finance chief calls for stronger emerging market voice during Saudi conference

Updated 12 February 2026
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Pakistan finance chief calls for stronger emerging market voice during Saudi conference

  • Aurangzeb tells Saudi state media developing economies must assume larger global role
  • Minister says AlUla conference can strengthen coordination among emerging economies

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb on Thursday called for developing economies to play a greater role in shaping global economic governance in an interview on the sidelines of the AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies in Saudi Arabia.

The conference, hosted by the Kingdom’s Finance Ministry, brings together top government functionaries, central bank governors and policymakers from emerging markets to discuss debt sustainability, macroeconomic coordination and structural reforms amid global economic uncertainty.

In a conversation with the Saudi Press Agency, Aurangzeb described the conference as a timely platform for dialogue at a moment of heightened geopolitical tensions, trade fragmentation and rapid technological change, including advances in artificial intelligence.

“It is not merely about discussions but about translating deliberations into concrete policy actions and execution over the course of the year,” he said, according to a statement circulated by the Finance Division in Islamabad.

The minister said emerging markets’ growing share of global output and growth should be matched by greater influence in international decision-making.

He noted these economies must strengthen collective dialogue and coordinated policy responses to address shared challenges, adding that the global landscape had evolved significantly since the inaugural edition of the conference.

Aurangzeb expressed confidence that the outcomes of the AlUla Conference would contribute to strengthening coordination among emerging economies and reinforcing their collective voice in shaping a more inclusive and resilient global economic order, the statement added.