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Indian Pop or Indi-Pop was a pop music scene that briefly existed in India starting in the late eighties, reaching its peak in the late nineties, and then abruptly dying off. This scene was independent of Bollywood and Filmi Music in that the artists released entire albums full of material, but none of it was used as a song in a movie.

The scene was started by Britain based Indian origin producer Biddu, who had produced quite a few disco hits such as Kung fu Fighting and Dance Little Lady Dance. Alternatively, a pop music scene had sprung up in Goa, which was more West influenced than the rest of India, owing to its large Christian population. It wasn’t until the late eighties when an album released by any independent artist could gain any traction. Most artists couldn’t make it without their songs and/or music videos being profiled by Doordarshan, India’s state run TV network. As such, they still remained purely a niche.

The economic reforms of 1991, which allowed foreign direct investment into India, and thereby allowed foreign cable channels namely MTV Asia, to broadcast in India, changed the fortunes of this scene. Now, MTV could serve as a vehicle to promote their music, once it had realized the then untapped potential of the Indian television market. Soon, more Indian pop artists’ videos were shown on MTV Asia as well as Channel V, a channel created to specifically operate in the Indian market. With the launch of Channel V in 1995, Indipop hit peak popularity during the remainder of the nineties.

The genre started to decline in 2000 and onwards, owing largely to there being little to no discernible differences between a typical Indipop song and a typical Bollywood filmi song. Also, Bollywood offered much better financial incentives for a singer, than breaking into the pop scene could. Someone photogenic enough and with the dancing skills for a music video, could instead make it as an actor/actress who could sing their own songs too. Therefore, most successful Indipop stars of the nineties eventually made it into Bollywood and the scene died out eventually in the mid-aughts.

Independent of this, a rock scene also arose in India in the early nineties, but it never achieved mainstream success. A lot of these bands remained underground, through Indipop’s rise and decline, but branching out into genres like raaga-metal (blending classical Hindustani or Carnatic singing with classic metal style instrumentals) and using the Internet to gain exposure.

List of Indipop Artists

  • Alisha Chinai - switched between Indipop and Bollywood a lot
  • Adnan Sami - originally a British National of Pakistani origin, he migrated to India, then emigrated back to Britain once the scene faded.
  • Anaida
  • Anu Malik - a well known Bollywood music composer and producer, who briefly dabbled in this genre
  • Aasma - a group formed from the winners of an Idol like competition
  • Aryans - a pop band that played their own instruments
  • Baba Sehgal
  • Colonial Cousins - A collaboration between longtime Bollywood playback singer Hariharan and Anglo-Indian musician Leslie Lewis
  • Daler Mehndi - probably the most well known Indipop artist, due to his song Tunak tunak tun achieving internet meme status
  • Shantanu and Sagarika
  • Hansraj Hans
  • Vikas Bhalla
  • Shamak
  • Remo Fernandez
  • Sharon Prabhakar
  • Models - an all girl group
  • Viva - an all girl group put together from Idol contest winners
  • Rageshwari - A failed actress turned playback singer who found success here
  • Suneeta Rao
  • Shubha Mudgal - a classical Hindustani singer who briefly crossed over.

A list of rock artists/bands based in India

  • Avial - sing in Malayalam
  • Bloodywood
  • Color Blind
  • Euphoria - tend to be very soft
  • Indus Creed previously Rock Machine
  • Parikrama

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