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Palash Sen Says He Doesn’t Have Rights to Any of Euphoria Songs: ‘I Haven’t Made One Rupee Out of Maaeri’ | Exclusive


For nearly 23 years, Euphoria has epitomized the independent pop music scene in India. These were the guys who jumpstarted hundreds of thousands of people’s foray into homegrown pop music. In short, they’re simply the icons who shaped the future of popular indie music with classic songs like Maaeri, Aana Meri Gully, Dhoom Pichak Dhoom, Mehfuz, and Bewafaa, among others.


However, it’s only unfortunate that the band doesn’t have exclusive rights to any of their works. This means that it hasn’t been able to earn money from its own songs being played on different platforms.

Sadly, the music industry has always made more money for record labels than it has for artistes, said Palash Sen, the lead vocalist of Euphoria. “I plan to re-release our old albums simply because we don’t have rights to any one of them. I will tell you the greatest truth of my life which is I have never made one rupee out of Maaeri. Never! Everybody sings Maaeri. It’s played everywhere and I don’t even get one rupee out of it. It is unfair. This system is unfair. The only reason I’d like to remake our songs is to get rights to them and claim them,” the singer told us.

Sen, who recently performed in Delhi along with his fellow band members Debajyoti Bhaduri, Rakesh Bhardwaj, Prashant Trivedi, Vishal Mehta, and others, as part of The Doers Club’s marquee event, came down heavily on Bollywood and big record labels for making music a commodity.

Palash Sen of Euphoria during his performance at The Doers Club’s Marquee event in New Delhi. (Image courtesy: PR handout)

“The problem in this country is not music being free, but Bollywood and music labels. Bollywood makes music according to films and because they have so much money they will promote that music to the maximum but that is not music being made for music per se. It’s just the music to promote a film. Whatever is leftover from the films, labels will take out their sums. So, unless you really go and search for Euphoria or Lucky Ali or any of the independent artistes online, we are not in your face. Ninety-eight percent of people will watch what’s in their face, they don’t have the time or energy to go and search except for the people who were there in the 90s because they know what real music is all about,” Sen said.

Sen, who’s been a torchbearer of independent music, further said that we need a fair way to compensate musicians in the country. “Last year, I started this petition called ‘India for Indie’ where I requested people to sign it so that I could take it to the government of India and the Prime Minister and ask them, ‘Who’s looking after the freelance musicians during the pandemic?’ ‘What do they do?’ The first thing that people fall back on during these trying times is entertainment. But you need money to reach everywhere,” he said.



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