試す 金 - 無料
Ahmer's 'Alive in K II' Turns Pain, Politics and Hope Into Art
RollingStone India
|November 2024
Kashmiri artist's latest EP is a profound meditation on memory, politics and personal truth
Ave you ever had that moment when you hear a song and instantly know something's different? That was me in 2019, just scrolling through random tracks, when I stumbled upon Ahmer's “Elaan” with Prabh Deep and Sez On The Beat.
Now here's the thing: I didn't even know what Koshur was at the time, but whatever Ahmer was spitting, it went straight to the gut. His words came so harsh that the language barrier just melted away. It wasn't about the interpretation of bars and their meaning, rather it was the intensity, the rawness, which came through. Ahmer wasn't just rapping but he was taking you to a deeper part where something greater was going on, in a place where you cannot ignore.
Fast forward into today, Ahmer's new project Alive in K II is a logical natural evolution of what he has been building since those early days. If you rewind through his albums such as Little Kid Big Dreams, Inqalab, or Azli, you know he is a storyteller, a voice for Kashmir that refuses to be silenced. Each of these efforts has stripped away layers of what it means to exist in a place like Kashmir, one of the most misunderstood regions in the world. With Alive in K II, Ahmer isn't just telling that story; he's digging deeper.
In a conversation with Rolling Stone India, Ahmer opens up on the fact that Alive in K II is more than just a sequel. It is a reflection of the growth in him as an artist and as a person. “The stories in
このストーリーは、RollingStone India の November 2024 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
RollingStone India からのその他のストーリー
RollingStone India
KRSNA'S RAP LEGACY IS CALCULATED, NOT CHANCED
THE DELHI RAPPER HAS TURNED PATIENCE AND PRECISION INTO A CAREER BLUEPRINT.
10 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
KENYA'S PROTEST MOVEMENT IS CREATING SOME RADICAL NEW MUSIC
In the summer of 2024, protests in Kenya against an unpopular tax-raising proposal led to at least 60 deaths, mostly at the hands of police, according to a local watchdog group.
3 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
WHY THE GLOBAL FASHION WORLD NEEDS TO TUNE INTO INDIA'S HIP-HOP WAVE
From Karan Aujla and King, to Badshah and Raja Kumari, India's hip-hop artists are shaping style, identity, and consumer trends in a way that can no longer be ignored.
5 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
BADVILLAIN: “THRILLER' IS PROOF OF HOW MUCH WE'VE IMPROVED'
Badvillain shares anecdotes on their journey to self-expression, using 'Thriller' as a song to showcase their confidence, attitude, and emotional depth
2 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
LONG LIVE MAC MILLER YEARS AFTER HIS DEATH, I FINALLY GET WHAT MAC MILLER WAS SAYING
A REDISCOVERY OF HIS WORK SHOWS HOW HIS CATALOG HAS GROWN INTO A LIVING ARCHIVE OF VULNERABILITY AND HOPE
3 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
YOUNG ILL IS CARVING OUT HIS OWN LANE IN THE KOREAN HIP-HOP SCENE
Choosing connection over controversy, Young Ill wants his music to give hope, inspire individuality, and show there's more to Korean hip-hop than stereotypes.
5 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
Olivia Dean Adds Her Own Page to the Book of Love
The second album from this gifted British singer-songwriter pushes her music into an elevated tier.
3 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
HOW 'SABAR BONDA' CREATED A RURAL RAOMANCE STORY WITHOUT A SOUNDTRACK
DIRECTOR ROHAN KANAWADE OPENS UP ABOUT THE MAKINGS OF THE MARATHI ROMANCE DRAMA, WHICH IS SET FOR ITS THEATRICAL RELEASE ON SEPT. 19 ONWARDS
5 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
THE RISE OF KOREAN HIP-HOP AS A COUNTERCULTURE
BREAKING OUT OF SEOUL'S UNDERGROUND CLUBS, WE TRACE A JOURNEY DRIVEN BY CREATIVITY, PASSION, AND A REBELLIOUS SPIRIT THAT PAVED THE WAY FOR K-POP'S GLOBAL RISE.
8 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
WHAT DOES IT TAKE FOR AN ARTIST TO REINVENT THEMSELVES?
SINGER-SONGWRITERS LIKE ZOYA AND HANITA BHAMBRI ENTER NEW ERAS, ANYASA AND ZAEDEN CHANGED THEIR SIGNATURE SOUND, AND VINEET SINGH HUKMANI'S JAZZ ALBUM MARKS A DIFFERENT SONIC DIRECTION
6 mins
September - October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

