Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

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Lucid

111M streams

110,989,007

Shanti

80.3M streams

80,302,778

Moonstone EP

76.1M streams

76,141,858

Temptation

34M streams

34,018,102

Sweet Time

31.9M streams

31,889,988

Honey

29.4M streams

29,361,476

Asha’s Awakening

16.5M streams

16,541,791

Spell

10.1M streams

10,057,224

Stronger

9.3M streams

9,259,586

Tweety

8.4M streams

8,410,224

Biography

In the two years since releasing Asha’s Awakening, a lot has happened for Raveena: She’s toured internationally, become the first woman of Indian heritage to perform solo at Coachella, and recently completed her Saturn Return—welcoming a season of growth, transformation, and calm that’s central to her newest full-length offering, Where the Butterflies Go in the Rain. As a first-generation descendant of genocide survivors and Reiki healers, the queer Indian American artist has long centered spirituality in her creative process. Muses like Ella Fitzgerald, Sade, and Minnie Riperton helped her find her voice, but creating her own music allowed her to coalesce the Bollywood soundtracks she grew up with and the R&B, pop, and folk she discovered later on into a portal that transports listeners into another realm. Following in the footsteps of classic artists like Fleetwood Mac, Brandy, and Marvin Gaye, Where the Butterflies Go in the Rain draws inspiration from people who “are really good at capturing the beauty and loss of life in the same breath” to create an exploration of eco-futurism and sensuality that merges Indian aesthetics with ethereal fantasy. In her signature style, Raveena seamlessly unites powerful storytelling, traditional Indian instruments, and feel-good early 2000s pop hits like Sheryl Crow’s “Soak Up the Sun” and Corinne Bailey Rae’s “Put Your Records On” to put forth a work that’s more unabashedly herself than any that’s come before.