Pakistani singer Ali Sethi to perform at this year’s Coachella music festival alongside big names

In this file photo, posted on October 15, 2021, Pakistani singer Ali Sethi gestures during a concert in Lahore. (Photo courtesy: Instagram/alisethiofficial)
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Updated 11 January 2023
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Pakistani singer Ali Sethi to perform at this year’s Coachella music festival alongside big names

  • Ali Sethi will become the second Pakistani musician to perform at the prestigious music festival
  • He is slated to perform on the event’s second week, which will occur from April 21 to 23

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan singer Ali Sethi, who rose to fame across the globe last year with his hit song ‘Pasoori’, will be performing at this year’s Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in April, the singer announced in an Instagram post on Wednesday morning.

Coachella, which is arguably one of the most popular music festivals in the world, is known for its performances as well as unique art installations in the Colorado Desert.

The festival will take place over two weekends, starting from April 14 to 16, and April 21 to 23, 2023. According to Coachella’s Instagram post, Sethi will be performing on the second weekend.

Taking to his official Instagram account, the singer reshared this year’s lineup and invited his fans to join him in California.

“AAJAAO SAARAY (come, everyone) to Coachella,” he wrote on the photo-and-video sharing website.

This year’s lineup also includes Rosalía, Bad Bunny, Calvin Harris, Frank Ocean, Gorillaz, Björk, Eric Prydz, Chemical Brothers, and Blondie, among others.

Founded in 1999, the annual event is known for featuring some of the biggest names in the world of music, including Foo Fighters, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Coldplay, Depeche Mode, Kanye West, Lady Gaga, Eminem, Beyonce, Dr. Dre and Snoop Dog, Guns N’ Roses, The Prodigy, Rage Against The Machine, and Tiësto, among many others.

Sethi is the second Pakistani singer to make it to the international festival. In 2022, Grammy-winning Pakistani singer Arooj Aftab also performed at the event.

Last year, Sethi’s ‘Pasroori’ received global recognition after topping Google’s hum-to-search category in 2022, leaving behind BTS’s ‘Butter,’ Aditya A’s ‘Chand Baliyan,’ ‘Heat Waves’ by Glass Animals, and ‘Enemy’ by Imagine Dragons.

The song also became the first Pakistani song to rank third on Spotify’s Global Viral 50 list.


Hamza Hawsawi on headlining The Fridge in Riyadh

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Hamza Hawsawi on headlining The Fridge in Riyadh

DUBAI: Saudi R&B artist Hamza Hawsawi headlined The Fridge’s “Concert Series KSA Season 1” over the weekend, performing a show in Riyadh’s JAX District as part of a two-day program spotlighting emerging talent.

Hawsawi’s performance followed “The Fridge Open Mic,” which took place at the same venue the night before. The open mic offered rising artists a professional stage to perform original material in front of a live audience, creating space for experimentation and discovery within the local music scene.

Speaking during the event, Hawsawi highlighted the importance of platforms such as open mics for artists. “I think it is important because an open mic is an opportunity to get to know new artists,” he said. “For industry professionals, like Fridge, it is an eye-opener to the scene, and it lets you understand how the scene is going, what kind of artists you’re gonna be dealing with in the future.”

From an artist’s standpoint, he added, the format remains essential for growth. “We do need open mics. We do need to be out there and to try different things, and to sing to different people, and to test our art and find out if people are gonna gravitate towards it or not.”

Hawsawi has spent more than 15 years developing a sound rooted in R&B, soul and pop, building an audience that now spans the region and beyond. He has accumulated more than 33 million global views and collaborated with a range of regional and international artists. 

His track “Million Miles” was selected as the official Rally Dakar anthem, while his live performances have included stages such as MDLBeast and the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

Asked whether he feels a responsibility to help shape the Saudi R&B scene, Hawsawi described a fluid relationship with that role. “Sometimes I feel that sense of responsibility,” he said. “Other times I feel like I’m just a human being trying to express my feelings … But we’re just artists at the end of the day.”

He added that while he sometimes embraces being a beacon for the genre, “other times I feel like I want to be low-key, and I don’t even want to be seen or heard.”

Hawsawi also reflected on one of his personal challenges as an artist in the Kingdom: writing and performing primarily in English. 

“That has been the biggest challenge to face,” he said. 

While Arabic remains the most widely spoken language in Saudi Arabia, Hawsawi explained that English allows him to express what he feels more clearly, particularly when it comes to emotion and meaning.

“The nuances of what I feel and all the metaphors for me trying to say something but not saying it, you know, not a lot of people get that,” he said, noting that his work often reaches a niche audience. “But I’m happy with that.”