
Musicians MS Krnsa and Vijaynarain
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
A stage is usually where musicians arrive to be seen. This week in Chennai, they are stepping onto it for someone who cannot.
Just weeks after rapper Devoid (Dev Anand) was left critically injured in a road accident, the city’s independent music community has come together in an extraordinary show of solidarity. From rappers and rock bands to gospel singers, choirs, Sufi musicians and independent artistes, nearly 50 performers are gathering at Aura Studios, T Nagar, turning live music into a lifeline for one of their own.
What is unfolding is more than a fundraiser. It is a portrait of a community refusing to let one of its voices fade into silence. “We’re all coming together for this showcase because, before anything else, we are a community,” says Tanvi Shah, a multi-lingual singer and the first woman of Indian origin to be awarded a Grammy. “One of our fellow artistes met with a terrible accident, and he’s going through a difficult phase. This fundraiser is our way of standing by him and his family at a time that truly matters,” she says.

Tanvi Shah
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement
For Tanvi, moments like these cut through the boundaries artistes often occupy within their own worlds and genres. “We may have our differences, our own journeys, and our own spaces, but moments like this remind us that humanity comes first,” she says.
For Girinandh C, founding member of Aura Studios, the fundraiser was born from a simple question: what can artistes offer when money alone is not enough? “We felt the best way we could help was through our music. That is the energy we want to pass on to Devoid, so that he comes back on stage,” he says hopefully.
Singer-composer Kalyani Nair sees the fundraiser as a reminder of the instinct musicians return to in moments of helplessness. “Sometimes, as musicians, I think the only thing we truly know is how to come together through music. This is a very small way of standing by him during this difficult time,” she says.

Maarten Visser
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement
Kalyani says she hopes the collective intention behind the performances, and the sheer number of people showing up for Devoid, carries its own kind of healing.
In many ways, the fundraiser is also a reflection of Chennai’s independent music scene itself — fragmented in sound perhaps, but deeply united in moments that matter.
To attend the fundraiser concerts, audiences can register through the form linked in Aura Studios’ bio on Instagram. Donation details will be shared with registered participants via WhatsApp. Those interested can also contribute at the venue and attend the performances on the day of the show.
Published – May 08, 2026 12:41 pm IST
