
Sangeeta Katti Kulkarni will perform at Ekatvam Holi Music Fest 2025
The Hindu
Sangeeta Katti Kulkarni will perform at the Ekatvam Holi Music Fest 2025
The Ekatvam Holi Music Fest 2025, will feature an all-women line-up, showcasing artistes such as H Amritha Shenoy, Debopriya Chatterjee, Suchismita, Kalpana Kishore, Shreya Kolathaya, Sreeja Rajendran, Sri Ranjani Santhanagopalan, Sangeeta Katti Kulkarni and Kanchana sisters.
This is Ekatvam’s fifth edition of Holi Music festival. Founded by Rajmohan Krishnan, Ekatvam aims at nurturing musical talent, both emerging artists and masters, blending tradition and innovation across diverse genres.
The festival will be held over two weekends — March 22 and 23, and March 29 and 30. Bengaluru-based Hindustani vocalist, Sangeeta Katti, will perform on March 30. Thanking Ekatvam for hosting the event, Sangeeta hopes one day the festival will become a global event.
The singer, started her training under the legendary Sangeet Samrat Naushad Sahab (famed composer of Indian cinema) and gave her debut concert at the age of five. She went on to learn music from Sheshagiri Dandaput and Chandrashekhar Puranikmath (from Dharwad), Padma Bhushan Basavaraj Rajguru, Gana Saraswati Padma Vibhushana Kishori Amonkar.
Sangeeta celebrates 50 years in music this year and says she owes her career to her gurus, parents, fans and the music industry. “Singing at Ekatvam, which also celebrates Holi is apt as we have seven colours of a rainbow and seven notes of the music, making it a beautiful coming together of the sapta-swaras and the satrang. All the ragas, are beautiful blends of these seen notes, specifically in Hindustani music, which has Thaats.”
The music, Sangeeta says, depicts different moods, which are associated with colours. “If we close our eyes, we see colours. If you close your eyes and listen to a raag, it creates positivity and will surely touch and evoke a certain emotion as every raag has a rasa in it.”
Whether it is Carnatic or Hindustani, music follows the seven-note theory, says Sangeeta. “Musicians are always astonished at the dimensions and depths of what the seven notes can bring forth. We cry, laugh or are wonderstruck by music, making these very notes powerful. That is the perspective of a musician.”

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