Aishwarya Majmudar: The Modern Voice of Navratri
From teenage television star to one of the most in-demand headliners on the garba circuit.
Some artists grow into the garba stage. Aishwarya Majmudar has essentially lived on it — a performer who has been in the public eye since her teens and has spent the years since becoming one of Navratri's most reliable headliners.
From television to the top
Majmudar first won national attention as a young contestant on a televised singing competition, then built a career that stretches across Gujarati folk, playback singing, and Bollywood. That versatility is precisely what a modern garba night demands.
Range is the appeal
Her sets glide between soulful traditional garba and high-energy contemporary numbers — the dynamic that keeps a floor of thousands moving from the opening aarti to the final dhol beat. She can hold a devotional moment and then detonate the room.
On the diaspora circuit
Majmudar is among the contemporary Gujarati artists whose music defines Navratri floors across North America each season. Browse upcoming Garba nights on Rameelo.
Music & Culture Correspondent
Rahul Thakkar
A trained tabla player turned journalist, Rahul writes about the sound of Navratri — the dhol, the sargam, and the artists reshaping the modern Garba stage.