Press

The press page allows you to download the last updated press kits for each Tritha’s dimension.

Tritha

You would like to learn more about Tritha as a hindustan trip-hop  singer, mixing traditional and contemporain sounds? Here is your press kit!

Click here for more details and to download Tritha press kit

Space

You are interesting about the Space concept, an open-minded music band where multicultural  talent can fusion together for a night, to get emotions and pleasure? Here is your 7th sky!

Click here for more details and to download SPACE press kit

Bollywood

Tritha also works for the Bollywood movies scene. If you are interested in her voice and want to learn more about her experience, download this last press kit.

Click here for more details and to download Tritha’s bollywood press kit

On the blog...

21 February 2013

Tritha launches her studio album “PaGLi”

Written by Tritha on 21 February 2013, 14:02

Finally the time has come !!

Tritha is launching her 1st studio album titled “PaGLi” !!

She is going to go on a multi-city tour with her band Tritha Electric which comprises of herself, drummer Paul Schneiter (also co-producer of album PaGLi) and nominated best bassist of the year, Tony Bass.

Dates are filling in…

For the capital, its announced on the 26th April, 2013 in TLR Cafe, Haus Khas VIllage. Its where she haf started off a year back with her own band in New Delhi.

Each gig will also feature musicians in every city and of course, songs from the new album.

Watch out for the “PaGLi”…

 
 

4 January 2013

Tritha and Mallika Sarabhai collaborate !!

Written by Tritha on 4 January 2013, 02:01

AND LALLA SANG…

(A Mallika Sarabhai production Featuring Tritha as the Voice of Lalla )

In medieval times, gasping under the patriarchal rules of reliving, many women broke taboos and boundaries to forge their own spiritual paths.  Andal, Lal Ded, Habba Khatoon, Akki and others forged new journeys and created new searches.

The story and writings of Lal Ded or Lalleshwari as the Muslims and Hindus alternately called her, is perhaps the most interesting, revolutionary and contemporary of them all.

This production takes Lalla’s vach in a new translation by Ranjit Hoskote and goes on a journey that becomes relevant in a world becoming increasingly fundamentalist and stuck on ritual.

This multi-media performance examines, through their writings and their lives the polarities or illumination – darkness, ritual – spiritual, illusion – disillusion.  It will create a physical space in which the performance will be placed, one that is plastic, transient and illusory.

The musical score is being created by varied composers – Carnatic musician Jayan Nair, electronic musician Jesse Sullivan and western classical trained Alfredo de Magalhaes..

 
 

31 August 2012

Tritha as one amongst the ten most interesting young Indian women

Written by Tritha on 31 August 2012, 01:08

Tritha full page in Marie-Claire IndiaCheck the full page in Marie-Claire India where Tritha is considered as one amongst the ten most interesting young Indian women.
Click here

 
 

29 June 2012

Tritha in Tehelka magazine !!

Written by Tritha on 29 June 2012, 18:06

“Punk is about my struggles as a woman in India”

Kolkata-born Tritha Sinha juggles three musical outfits – the solo/ acoustic TRITHA, her ethnopunk band Tritha Electric, and her Hindustani trip-hop band SPACE. She shuttles between Delhi, Kolkata and Paris, experimenting with different kinds of music.

tritha - tehelka magazine

Photo: Rohini Das

How has your family influenced your music?

We’re a typical Bengali family – we love eating fish and listening to music. My grandfather wanted a girl in the family to be a singer. When I was five my parents introduced me to an Indian classical music guru. I opted for music over medicine; my parents were persuaded because I was very serious about it. I’ve been supporting myself from the age of 17 doing music. I react almost physically to it, which propels me to sing and compose.

A childhood memory?

I sang Tagore in my own way, at the age of eight, in front of horrified aunties who’d been singing Rabindra Sangeet the way it’s been sung for 50 years.

What is ethno-punk?

Ethno comes from my Indian classical roots and baul influences. Punk is an expression of my struggles and frustrations looking for independence as a woman in India. I conceptualised this with Paul Schneiter, a French drummer and producer, for my new outfit Tritha Electric.

Instruments you play?

In Tritha Electric, I play the electric guitar; use a looper and a delay-effects voice processor. My electric tanpura, the mandira, and some percussion are a constant presence. I also picked up a kazoo from Paris — it’s my mini saxophone.

How has travelling influenced you?

Living in Paris, jamming with underground jazz musicians and travelling around Europe for the last seven summers has helped me integrate African beats, trip-hop and punk in my original songs. I go back to Kolkata to rejuvenate my knowledge of classical Indian music.

Tell us about your song Pagli.

A sound engineer in Paris wanted to hear me rap in Bengali. I imagined myself as a madwoman in the streets of Kolkata, took on that role and started singing like her. I’m going to make an album of it adding more songs. A new pagli song is a punk one called Fish Market.

CS Bhagya, from Tehelka Magazine, Vol 9, Issue 26, Dated 30 June 2012
Click here to read the original article of Tritha in Tehelka

 

 
 

17 May 2012

Tritha in Paris 12th June Designer day

Written by Tritha on 17 May 2012, 10:05

A bunch of french women designers got together this day what they call the designers day!!

They are the coccotte ladies and last year, they felt Tritha is the Indian coccotte women.

Coccotte meaning powerful, independent and very very creative and entrepreneurial.

So this 12th june 2012, coccotte performance of Tritha in Paris!!

See a report !

jeudi 21 juin 2012

Cocotte ID : tous les sens en éveil

Auteurs Stéphanie Doligez, Odile Cohen

Tritha, Jean-Charles Sommerard et les macarons d’Emmanuelle Chauveau de Macarons&co

Une scénographie complète éveillant tous nos sens, enrichissant les émotions visuelles du visiteur pour lui laisser un souvenir inoubliable de sa visite : voilà le pari que nous voulions lancer pour Cocotte ID.

Tritha, notre cocotte chanteuse indienne était prête à renouveler l’expérience, trop fière de pouvoir chanter dans l’évènement ‘so french’ que sont les Designers Days de paris !
La voix de Tritha est un véritable écrin qui nous livre l’Inde sur un plateau. Incantation nomade mixant musiques traditionnelles, influences trip-hop et instruments de rue – trompette, guitare et percussions en tout genre – son univers est une expérience électroacoustique envoûtante.
Comme l’année dernière sa prestation dans le jardin lors du vernissage fut un moment d’intense émotion.
Les plus de cette saison, furent les choix des design gustatifs et olfactif d’Emmanuelle Chauveau de Macoron&co et Jean-Charles Sommerard de Sevessence.
La première, engagée à la dernière minute, nous bluffa autant pas ses macarons salés exceptionnels que par la rapidité avec laquelle elle entra dans l’aventure ! Je l’ai rencontrée 3 jours avant, chez Odile Cohen, une amie comédienne. Celle-ci nous la présente :
Notre Emmanuelle est devenue une vraie cocotte en 1 an : elle est passée de l’enseignement à la création d’entreprise de fabrication de macarons ! En plus d’être bons, moelleux, colorés et fondants, Emmanuelle en invente toujours de nouveaux. Voilà pourquoi elle est une vraie créatrice. Le macaron géranium-framboise-basilic, les macarons salés foie gras-poivron-basilic, un délice…. Et en plus elle les personnalise en écrivant ce que vous voulez dessus ! C’est ainsi qu’il y aura peut-être un “macaron cocotte”. Je parie qu’il sera rose… Emmanuelle, c’est le courage et la créativité au bout des doigts!
On ne présente plus le deuxième, Jean-Charles Sommerard : artiste des arômes, créateur inspiré, producteur engagé et maître en identité olfactive ! 100% en phase avec notre scénographie dans laquelle il a plongé les yeux fermé en nous envoyant, après une courte explication de notre concept deux huiles magiques, Phileas et Mutine :
Des compositions originales, modernes et gourmandes qui rappellent aux douces ballades hespéridées chaudes et suaves. Elles expriment le mariage subtil d’agrumes où s’entremêlent notes florales, boisées, sublimées par des éclats vanillés pour Phileas et jasminées sublimées par des éclats vanillés et chocolat pour Mutine.
Phileas, qui me faisait aussi penser aux voyages fut placé dans la galerie et Mutine dans les étages où la créativité et la vie battaient leur plein. Une entrée directe dans son monde sensoriel et résolument hédoniste.
Belle récompense d’entendre toutes ces exclamations positives et de voir tous ces sourires dès l’entrée dans la maison. Les mêmes qu’au vernissage quand les invités goutaient les macarons d’Emmanuelle Choveau !
Et bien voilà, pari réussi : les visiteurs ressortent comblés et heureux, le sourire aux lèvres. On recommence quand les filles ?

Tritha sur Myspace
Tritha sur facebook
Macarons&co d’Emmanuelle Chauveau
Sevessence jean-Charles Sommerard

 

 
 

11 May 2012

Review of the TLR concert of Tritha

Written by Tritha on 11 May 2012, 03:05

 

Tritha’s live performance @ TLR, Delhi

Posted by Navni Kumar on January 23, 2012 in Loose Ends · 0 Comments

Part of the band ‘Space’,Tritha has been singing since she was five years old! Navni Kumar attends the 20-something singer’s live performance at Delhi’s The Living Room Café and comes back entranced.

 

The usually buzzing atmosphere at The Living Room Cafe came to a halt on Friday as Tritha took the stage. Starting serenely with her Tibetan bowl, she managed to capture the attention of the entire restaurant, the echoing sound emanating as if marking the beginning of a sacred ritual.

She found this bowl in a little tourist shop in the hills. When she started playing it in the shop and singing along, the entire shop just stopped and listened. That’s when she decided to incorporate it in her music along with the tanpura.

Her mesmerising voice soon caught up with the sound bowl, singing in melodious Bengali – one of the seven languages Tritha sings in. French, Tamil, Hindi, English and Sanskrit are some of the others. Accompanied by Rishabh Shankar and then 2 french musicians Paul Schneiter on drums and Tony on bass, she moved on to faster, louder self compositions, completely transforming the ambiance to one of thumping energy and fervour. The performance was meant as a preview for her first album to be launched later this year.

Tritha has been singing since she was five years old. Her parents recognised her talent at an early age and encouraged her to get training in Indian classical music, which she followed religiously for 18 years in Kolkata and Chennai. Although she completed her degree in Mass Communication from St Xaviers Kolkata, she soon found herself plunging into a singing career.

In 2001, she won ‘Close-Up Antakshari’ and has never looked back since. She has also entered the Bollywood realm and sung along with the likes of Kunal Ganjiawala, Vasundhara Das, Abhijit, Sukhwinder Singh, Jaspinder Narula, Indian Idol Abhijeet Sawant and CHANNEL [V] popstars Viva and Aasma. When asked what made her decide to take up music as a profession, she says, “It is just because of how I feel when I sing and how the audience feels when I sing. If my music touches the hearts of even a few people, I have achieved a lot.”

As part of the band Space, Tritha sings about a variety of themes ranging from childhood stories to social issues. “Women are still not completely free in India and we’re using music as a medium to create awareness,” she says. Although she classifies her music under the ethno-grunge genre, the music varies between soft acoustics to hard, clubby beats. Her aim is to urbanise Indian classical music. The future for Tritha is all about “singing, making more people like me and to release my album.”

Apart from being a singer, Tritha is also a foodie. So much so that she sometimes clubs her concerts with cooking: sharing with people her passion for music and good food. Thai and Bengali are her favourites and the mustard salmon is a huge hit in her circle.

 

Tit Bits

Favourite dish: Chicken 65 from Swagath, uthappam and other South Indian food from Naivedyam and TLC (fried chicken) from TLR

Most wow moment during a performance: When I was singing a capella at an international school in France and a girl burst out crying. She didn’t know the language but the music reminded her of birds flying in the sky. It was one of those intense moments when she truly felt her music was received.

Most embarrassing moment: At a concert in Rishikhesh where my guitar string was not to be found. I had to haul in my suitcase for support, much to the amazement of the audience.

When not singing or cooking: I watch movies, look for good books to read, search for exotic destinations to visit

Musicians she looks up to: Sushila Raman, Bjork

Dream concert: More gastronomical affairs, combining good food and good music

 

Performance schedule

 

Upcoming events at TLR

 

Space at 1 Cafe Boulevard, Saket

Saturday, 28 January, 9pm – 12pm

 

Blue Frog

Wednesday, 29 February

 

Wills Lifestyle Fashion Week

February, 15th-20th

 

Tritha & Space at Gulmarg Festival

March 2012

 

 
 

5 July 2011

Latest news!!!

Written by Tritha on 5 July 2011, 18:07

Click on the link below to check the latest pictures and infor of Tritha’s last trip in FRANCE:

Tritha Pics from Summer Music tour in Europe 2011

Tritha in Gallerie Hus, Paris

Tritha in Satellit Cafe, Paris

Tritha in Nantes-a musician\’s review

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

5 June 2011

SPACE in Indian Express

Written by Tritha on 5 June 2011, 13:06

SPACE in Indian Express

 
 

29 January 2011

SPACE in Kolkata

Written by Tritha on 29 January 2011, 13:01

space in kolkata

Times of India