24th May, under the vaulted elegance of Royal Opera House, Aanchal Shrivastava returns—not just to a stage, but to where a legacy first found its voice.
A homecoming steeped in nostalgia, yet charged with a grander, more powerful resonance than ever before.
What once began as an intimate stirring now unfolds into a full-blown, larger-than-life mehfil—richer, deeper, and unapologetically majestic.
This is not a comeback… it is a coronation of everything Yatra was always meant to become.
Experience the mystic power of Qawwali as Aanchal Shrivastava brings her transcendent concert Yatra back to Mumbai for an evening of poetic resonance and soulful melodies.
The Many Languages of Faith Through Music
Across cultures and belief systems, music has remained a profound expression of devotion — a way to access the divine beyond rituals and words. Sacred sounds, in all their diversity, echo the spiritual philosophies and emotional landscapes they emerge from.
From the soul-stirring verses of Sant Kabir to the serene strains of the Christian hymn Ave Maria, these musical traditions reveal how spiritual music, regardless of origin, speaks the same language of surrender. Whether it is a folk bhajan sung in praise of Krishna or the haunting intonation of a church choir, such melodies root us in something larger — in community, in devotion, in transcendence.Across traditions, these musical forms invite not just belief, but experience — moments where the listener feels part of a collective devotion, rooted in something larger than individual life. In their many languages and styles, they affirm that faith, when sung, speaks in a universal tongue.
A Short History of Qawwali – The Music of Ecstasy
Qawwali, the mystical form of Sufi Islamic devotional music, has its roots in 13th-century India, attributed to Amir Khusrau—the celebrated poet, scholar, and disciple of Nizamuddin Auliya. Designed as a musical offering at dargahs (Sufi shrines), qawwali weaves Persian, Urdu, Hindi, and Braj into rhythmic chants and poetic narratives that praise saints, express divine love, and mirror the seeker’s inner journey.
Performed by an ensemble of vocalists and musicians, qawwalis are built around powerful repetition, call-and-response structures, and a crescendo-like build-up that guides listeners into a trance-like state. The harmonium, tabla, and clapping hands become conduits for spiritual rapture. Famous lines like “Mast Qalandar” or “Bhar Do Jholi” are not just songs—they are timeless invocations.
Even as it remains rooted in tradition, qawwali has evolved—crossing over into Bollywood, global music festivals, and modern Sufi-fusion acts. Yet at its heart, it remains what it always was: a passionate cry for unity with the Divine.
Qawwali in Modern Times – Resonance Across Generations
While Qawwali is rooted in centuries-old Sufi traditions, its appeal has far from faded. In fact, it continues to flourish in modern cultural and musical landscapes — from shrine courtyards to global stages. The essence of Qawwali remains spiritual: a means to transcend the self and connect with the divine. But its language, presentation, and audience have all evolved.
Contemporary artists like the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Abida Parveen, the Sabri Brothers, and more recently, ensembles like Nizami Bandhu and Warsi Brothers, have kept the tradition alive while inviting new generations to engage with its intensity. Film music, too, has embraced Qawwali as a dramatic and devotional device — from classics like Parda Hai Parda and Bhar Do Jholi to modern reinterpretations in Coke Studio and digital streaming platforms.
Today, Qawwali lives at the intersection of the sacred and the social. In its modern iterations, it speaks to diverse spiritual experiences — whether performed in Urdu, Hindi, Punjabi, or even English. It has crossed religious boundaries, often sung at secular events, festivals, and concerts, drawing listeners with its emotive force and layered poetry.
Its resurgence in contemporary culture isn't merely nostalgic. For many, Qawwali represents a yearning for connection — to faith, to meaning, and to something larger than oneself in an increasingly fragmented world. The harmonium and tabla may now be accompanied by digital soundscapes, but the soul of Qawwali remains untouched: still calling, still echoing with devotion.