I've been a journalist for over a decade, working across newspapers and magazines. At Forbes India, I write and edit stories on varied themes. I am a sports buff — turning to the back pages of the newspaper first— and keenly follow current affairs, pop culture and new trends at the intersection of politics, business and culture. Being an inveterate foodie, I often end up writing about it.
Image: Zabeeh Afaque/Hindustan Times via Getty Images
In the universe of mere mortals, Aditya Prateek Singh Sisodia would have been your average engineering nerd. The 32-year-old from Chandigarh was admitted to St Stephen’s College in Delhi for a BSc in chemistry, but dropped out after a month and a half when he made it to the third list of Punjab Engineering College (PEC). “Engineer toh banna hi hai... that’s how the thinking was back then,” says the qualified civil engineer. Ironically, it was his stint at PEC and the group of friends that he made there that changed his outlook. “Unki soch waha se shuru hoti thi jahan mere khatam ho jaati the,” he says. As their out-of-the-box approach rubbed off on him, Sisodia ditched the normal—read, the job he landed after campus placement—and embraced what then seemed outlandish to his social milieu—making music.
Over a decade later, the pieces seem to be falling in place as Sisodia, better known as rapper Badshah, is turning out to be one of the most bankable stars in Bollywood and the music industry. He emerged onto the music scene in 2012 with ‘Saturday Saturday’, a ubiquitous party chant; it was adopted into a Bollywood number in Humpty Sharma Ki Dulhania in 2014. Consequence of Sound, an American online magazine, listed ‘DJ Waley Babu’, his debut solo release in 2015, as one of the 10 most popular non-English songs of the year. A multimillionaire by now (with a 300-plus sneakers collection that’s worth over a crore), his Bollywood repertoire is growing by the day with hits like ‘Kar Gayi Chull’ (Kapoor & Sons), ‘Abhi toh party shuru hui hai’ (Khoobsurat), ‘Baby ko Bass Pasand Hai’ (Sultan), ‘Kala Chashma’ (Baar Baar Dekho) and ‘Tareefan’ (Veere Di Wedding). In 2017, he ranked 35th on the Forbes India Celebrity 100 with an estimated earnings of Rs 23 crore. (“My aim is to be No 1 on that list,” he guffaws.) Ahead of the launch of O.N.E, his debut solo album (where he’s collaborated with Sunidhi Chauhan), on August 17, Badshah speaks to Forbes India. Edited excerpts:
Q. From Aditya Prateek Singh Sisodia to Badshah, tell us a bit about what has changed.
When I was growing up, it was extremely difficult to think big. My parents have been middle class all their lives and my future was set on the first day of every month. It was difficult for me to break those limitations in thinking. Today, that has changed. There is no limit to my imagination. For instance, I want to be the first guy to have a concert on the moon. I want to make more possibilities. I was the first one to shoot a music video on top of the O2 Arena in England. Earlier, it was tough for me to get into a zone where I could say, “Haan bhai, yeh ho sakta hai.”
Q. How did music happen to you? Were you into rap right from the beginning?
I rap because I am good at rapping. I am good at storytelling, rhyming words. I’m not good at singing. But I had all sorts of music around me when I was growing up. I had music on even when I was sleeping. I listen to ’90s Bollywood songs the most. Kumar Sanu, Alka Yagnik, Anand-Milind, Jatin-Lalit, Nadeem-Shravan are some of my idols. You make me listen to any of the songs for five seconds and I’ll tell you the name of the song.
Q. Your debut solo album comes over six years after your first solo breakthrough with ‘Saturday Saturday’ (released first in 2012, and then used in Humpty Sharma Ki Dulhania in 2014). What took so long?
From 2012 to 2018, I was trying to earn money, make a name for myself, widen my audience and learn how to deal with people. So that when I would make my own thing, I need to get a sense of a lot many other things, like how to target an audience. My experience in the industry has now taught me that. But I agree I am late. Sometimes, things are out of your control.
“ I think [the nepotism debate] stupid. I think we are wasting our time talking about it. Talent finds its way. Look at me, I have no connections.”