Neu Class of 2022: Priya Ragu
The Swiss-Tamil musician is forging a rarely-represented path, and crafting a collection of genre-amorphous hits in the process.
Priya cites M.I.A. as an influence, but hasn’t been inspired to follow her into writing politically by her brush with the complex situation in her parents’ homeland - yet, at least. “I’ll talk about politics in the future, for sure,” she explains, “but for now, I don’t see my lane as being a political path. It was powerful to see how M.I.A. used her platform, but that was also at a time when the war was going on - the situation’s different now. There are still a lot of things to address; the military is still there, there are still no equal rights, and the oppression of the Tamil people goes on, and it’s been happening for over 20 years now. I think there are solutions, and whatever I can do to speak to that, I will do. But there’s nothing too political on the mixtape.”
Instead, the importance of having artists like M.I.A. to look up to came in the sense of representation, something the singer has increasingly come to realise the crucial value of. It’s rare for Swiss musicians to make waves in the western musical world, let alone Tamil ones, and Priya Ragu is avowedly both. The title of her mixtape isn’t just lip service to her background; on ‘Santhosum’, she sings entirely in her parents’ language (“The oldest language in the world - sick, right?”), while ‘Lighthouse’ interpolates Sri Lankan flute and ‘Deli’ fuses South Asian percussion with electronic drums. It’s groundbreaking, but without M.I.A as a role model, she might never have been so daring.
“It gives kids a lot of hope if they can turn on the TV, or put on a record, and see and hear somebody who looks like them,” she enthuses. “It gives you courage. To begin with, for me, it was Black women; I was looking up to people like Lauryn Hill, but until M.I.A. came along, it felt like there were no Sri Lankans making it happen. I remember the first time I saw her, on TV. I thought, ‘Oh my god, this is actually possible!’ The way she sounded, the way she looked - she was just totally true to herself, and the western world was accepting of her. I don’t feel like I have to hide any of my heritage away.”
A similarly important figure has been Priya’s older brother, who produced ‘damnshestamil’ and records his own music under the name JaphnaGold. He’s a key collaborator in the songwriting process, particularly in the creation of beats, but has been an influence her whole life, from passing down records to introducing her to Tamil film soundtracks.
“He’s my older brother, so growing up, everything he was into, I was copying,” she laughs. “He was a big hip hop fan, so that’s where that side of the music comes from, but a lot of the stuff on ‘damnshestamil’ is just a reflection of what I was into growing up - R&B and soul, past and present. So on the one hand, Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder and Nina Simone were important, and then on the other, Brandy, The Fugees, Musiq Soulchild. And yet, all that time, my heart was beating for Tamil music; I’d listen to it and sort of daydream about how my life might have been different if my parents hadn’t moved here for work. I’d watch a Tamil movie, and the lifestyles I’d see, I’d wonder if that was how mine would have been. It felt like having two different personalities at times.”
This duality is something Priya has readily embraced in her music, in both sound and themes; ‘damnshestamil’ runs the gamut from bangers (‘Chicken Lemon Rice’) to heartbreak (‘Forgot About’). She’ll begin work in earnest on a debut album in 2022; it’ll be more conceptual than the mixtape, she says, but is unlikely to be littered with features. “If you asked me who my dream collaboration would be with, I’d say there isn’t one. I’m cool with just doing my own thing and putting it out there.”
Musically speaking, it sounds as if anything’s possible. “Style-wise, there won’t be fewer of them,” Priya says. “There’ll probably be even more! According to my fortune teller, anyway…”
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