Ganavya

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Ganavya
Ganavya on KEXP.jpg
ganavya playing for KEXP.
Background information
Born
Ganavya Doraiswamy

(1991-07-21)July 21, 1991
New York City, United States
Website www.ganavya.com

Ganavya Doraiswamy (born 1991), known mononymously as ganavya, is an Indian and American singer, songwriter, and musician. She has released four albums, most recently Nilam in 2025, and has collaborated with musicans including Quincy Jones, A. R. Rahman, and Esperanza Spalding.

Contents

Biography

Ganavya Doraiswamy was born on July 21, 1991 in New York City, United States. [1] [2] When she was 7, her family moved to township of Senkottai, and then later to Chennai, capital of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. [3] In India, Ganavya learned to play jalatharangam from her grandmother Seetha Doraiswamy, and studied Carnatic music and Bharatanatyam. Her mother practiced the Pandharpur Wari. [4] [2] She has one brother.

Ganavya was homeschooled for portions of her childhood instead prioritizing arts training, but later obtained undergraduate degrees in theater and psychology at Florida International University at 19. [4] [3] She then worked briefly as a rehabilitation counselor at Everglades Correctional Institution in Florida before earning a graduate degree at Berklee College of Music. [3] After graduating, Ganavya taught a course on South Asian music at Berklee Valencia. [3] [1]

She has a graduate degree in Ethnomusicology from UCLA and a Ph.D in Creative Practice and Critical Inquiry from Harvard University, where she helped lead the Songwrights Apothecary Lab, an experimental music-based research lab founded by Spalding. Her dissertation advisors were Esperanza Spalding and Claire Chase, with committee members including Peter Sellars. [3] [2]

She co-founded the We Have Voice Collective. [5]

Career

In 2015, Ganavya recorded Aikyam: Onnu, a collection of jazz standards she translated to her native language of Tamil and abhangs. The album was released in 2018. [3] [1]

In 2024, Ganavya released her second album like the sky I've been too quiet, co-produced by Shabaka Hutchings, and named after a line from a poem by Kaveh Akbar. [6] [7] Her third album Daughter of a Temple was recorded in 2022 at the Moores Opera House with over 40 featured musicians including Esperanza Spalding, Wayne Shorter, Shabaka Hutchings, Immanuel Wilkins, Rasika Shekar and Vijay Iyer and was released at the end of 2024 on Leiter. [2] The album is a selection of material from a week-long gathering, with initial decisions being made by Ganavya and Spalding, with the final round of mixing being led by Nils Frahm in Funkhaus Berlin. [8] Daughter of a Temple was Giles Peterson's Best Album of the Year, and was named by The Guardian as one of the best global albums of 2024. [9] [10] Her fourth album Nilam was released in 2025, and features vocals in Tamil, English, and Old Marathi. [7] [11] In 2025, a track from Nilam titled "Pasayadan" was listed as Barack Obama's favorite tracks of the year. [12] Nilam was Songlines Album of the Year. [13]

Ganavya has collaborated with Quincy Jones, Nils Frahm, Esperanza Spalding, Immanuel Wilkins, A.R. Rahman, Charles Lloyd, Alfredo Rodríguez, Shabaka Hutchings, Joy Harjo, and Lauren Groff. She is a solo vocalist on multiple Grammy-award winning tracks, notably for Songwrights Apothecary Lab, for which she helped create a lab by the same name at Harvard led by Spalding, and for having written and sung the first Tamil lyrics to win a Latin Grammy for Residente's "Antes Que El Mundo Se Acabe". She has a longstanding collaborative relationship with Peter Sellars, most recently having co-created an opera titled Nine Jewelled Deer with set design by Julie Mehretu. [1] [2] [14]

Albums

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Timothy Monger. Ganavya Biography at AllMusic . Retrieved November 17, 2025.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Marcus J. Moore (November 20, 2024), "The Singer Whose Work Feels Like Prayer", The New York Times , retrieved November 17, 2025
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Alan Pedder (March 18, 2024), "All life is learning: How ganavya found the wisdom to stand still", The Line of Best Fit (interview), retrieved November 17, 2025
  4. 1 2 "Jazz Musicians: Ganavya Doraiswamy", All About Jazz , February 15, 2019, retrieved November 17, 2025
  5. Giovanni Russonello (April 30, 2018), "Women Fighting Sexism in Jazz Have a Voice. And Now, a Code of Conduct", The New York Times (interview), retrieved November 17, 2025
  6. Charlie Cawood, "ganavya – like the sky I've been too quiet" , Songlines , no. 196 (April 2024), p. 58, ISSN   1464-8113 , retrieved November 17, 2025
  7. 1 2 David Honigmann (September 27, 2025), "How the singer Ganavya infused jazz with spiritual soul", The Financial Times , retrieved November 17, 2025
  8. Charlie Cawood, "ganavya – Daughter of a Temple" , Songlines , no. 204 (January 2025), p. 60, ISSN   1464-8113 , retrieved November 17, 2025
  9. Gilles Peterson (November 15, 2024), "BBC6 Music Gilles Peterson's Album of the Year", BBC (interview), retrieved January 9, 2026
  10. Ammar Kalia (December 11, 2024), "The 10 best global albums of 2024", The Guardian , retrieved January 9, 2026
  11. Jane Cornwell, "ganavya – Nilam" , Songlines , no. 210 (August 2025), p. 67, ISSN   1464-8113 , retrieved November 17, 2025
  12. Sharmila Ganesan (December 20, 2025), "Obama's songfest features Pasayadan", The Times of India (interview), retrieved November 17, 2025
  13. "Songlines Music Awards 2025", Songlines , no. 214 (January 2026), p. 64, ISSN   1464-8113 , retrieved January 9, 2026
  14. Laura van Straaten (July 17, 2025), "In a New Opera, Violence Against Women Is Not Just the Stuff of Fables", The New York Times (interview), retrieved November 17, 2025