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Shashwat Sachdev
Shashwat Sachdev
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Shashwat Sachdev is an Indian music composer and entrepreneur. He won the Best Background Music in the 66th National Film Awards for his score in Uri: The Surgical Strike. He also won the 65th Filmfare R.D. Burman Award for best new and upcoming talent.

Key Information

Early life

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Sachdev was born in Jaipur. He started learning music when he was three years old, beginning with Hindustani classical vocals and rhythm. He then went on to train in the Western classical piano during his school days.[1]

Career

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Shashwat started his career in 2011 in Hollywood, Los Angeles working on numerous projects before moving to India in 2016.[2]

In 2017, he was the music composer for Phillauri, which starred Anushka Sharma and Diljit Dosanjh.[3][4]

In 2018, he composed four songs for Veere Di Wedding, a Bollywood female buddy comedy film, directed by Shashanka Ghosh. The film stars Kareena Kapoor Khan, Sonam Kapoor Ahuja, Swara Bhaskar and Shikha Talsania. He scored for Selection Day an Indian Netflix Original Sports web television series, based on Aravind Adiga's 2016 novel of the same name. Produced by Anil Kapoor and Anand Tucker.

In 2019 he composed the music as well as background score for Uri: The Surgical Strike, an Indian action film written and directed by debutant Aditya Dhar and produced by Ronnie Screwvala under his banner RSVP Movies starring Vicky Kaushal. The film is based on the 2016 Indian Army's surgical strikes on PoK in retaliation for the Uri attack. The film's music received rave reviews.[5][6] His background score was also appreciated and released separately on popular demand.[7][8] Shashwat won the award for Best Background Music in the 66th National Film Awards for Uri: The Surgical Strike.[9][10] He won the 65th Filmfare R.D. Burman Award for best new and upcoming talent.[11][12][circular reference] Shashwat also won the 21st IIFA Award for best background score for Uri: The Surgical Strike.[13][14]

He released a production album titled Euphoria And The Following Realties along with Extreme Music for which his track Dharma won Best World Production Music 2021 and Shashwat himself won PRS Foundation The Best Newcomer 2021[15] in the Production Music Awards 2021 held in London on 12 December 2021 that celebrate the best production music libraries and most talented composers from all over the world.[16]

In 2022 he worked Attack an Indian Hindi-language superhero film directed and co-written by Lakshya Raj Anand.The film produced by Jayantilal Gada, John Abraham and Ajay Kapoor, stars John Abraham alongside Jacqueline Fernandez and Rakul Preet Singh.[17]

Shashwat next released independent music with, a new label called IndieA Records launched in India with the intention to nurture and promote independent artists backed by Universal Music India, he dropped his first piece of music with them called “Awaara Ho.”[18][19]

2024 saw his work on the film Article 370 a political action thriller film directed by Aditya Suhas Jambhale, who co-wrote the film with Aditya Dhar, Arjun Dhawan, and Monal Thaakar. Produced by Jyoti Deshpande, Aditya Dhar, and Lokesh Dhar, the film stars Yami Gautam, Priyamani, Skand Thakur, Ashwini Kaul, Vaibhav Tatwawadi, Arun Govil, and Kiran Karmarkar in pivotal roles.[20]

Shashwat is currently working as a featured artist on Hans Zimmer and James Everingham's score for the upcoming BBC crime thriller Virdee, based on AA Dhand’s much-loved novels. The six-part series is adapted for the screen by AA Dhand and is produced by Magical Society for BBC One and BBC iPlayer.[21][22]

Discography

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As composer

[edit]
Year Film Lyricist(s) Notes
2017 Phillauri Anvita Dutt Guptan All songs except "Din Shagna Da" and "What's Up"
2018 Kaalakaandi Composed title song
Veere Di Wedding Anvita Dutt Gopalan, Raj Shekhar, Qaran, Rupin Pawha, White Noise, Shashwat Sachdev, Badshah, Shellee, Gaurav Solanki Composed four songs
2019 Uri: The Surgical Strike Kumaar
2022 Attack: Part 1 Kumaar, Girish Nakod (Rap)
2023 Tejas Kumaar
2024 Article 370 Osho Jain, Sudhanshu Saria, Kumaar, Shashwat Sachdev
Kill Shashwat Sachdev, Sidhant Kaushal, Shekhar Astitwa Composed one song
Ulajh Kumaar, Jasmine Sandlas, Sudhanshu Saria
2025 Kesari Chapter 2 Irshad Kamil, Sukhwinder Amrit All songs except for "Khumaari"; one remake
The Ba***ds of Bollywood Kumaar, Jasmine Sandlas, Akshat Verma, Vishal Dadlani, Raja Kumari, Aryan Khan, Karan Aujla, Shashwat Sachdev Composed nine songs
Dhurandhar Kumaar

Original Scores

[edit]
Year Film
2019 Uri: The Surgical Strike
2022 Attack: Part 1
2024 Article 370
2025 Kesari Chapter 2
The Ba***ds of Bollywood
Dhurandhar

Independent Work

[edit]
Year Title Singer(s) Lyricist(s) Composer(s) Label
2019 Kahaniya Madhubanti Bagchi Shashwat Sachdev Himself Independent
2020 Maan Ja Himself
Roko Na
2021 Machlo Romy Kumaar Malsons
Sha - Dobara Shreya Jain Shashwat Sachdev
Meri Jaan Jubin Nautiyal Raj Shekhar
Tenu Vekhan Da Shirley Setia

Romy

Kumaar
Sha - O Jaana Himself Shashwat Sachdev
2022 Awaara Ho Shashwat Sachdev IndieA Records - UMG[23]
Baaton Baaton Main Anumita Nadesan
Paris London Amsterdam Aanchal Tyagi
Ek Ghar Himself
Awaara Ho - Dream Pop Shilpa Rao
Nazdeek Aa Himself
2023 Tumhe Na Chahne Ko
Kaisi Jadugari Prateek Kuhad

Albums

[edit]
Year Album Track(s) Label
2021 Euphoria (And the Following Realities) The New Karma Extreme Music
Euphoria (Kaala Doriya)
Seeking Rapture
Blade
Delirious
Conqueror (Jugni)
Ecstacy (Ant Bahar)
Dharma
Bliss (Ahir Bhairav)
Brahman
Maya
Climax
2022 Shades of Cashmere Blessing the Bride (Bai Sa) Extreme Music
Lone Poet (Aeri Aali)
Blissful Homecoming (Jhir Mir)
Rain Dance (Barsan Laagi)
Sweet Stranger (Mithiyan Mehman)
Love and Cloudburst (Baucharan)
Bittersweet Farewell (Jalalo Bilalo)
The Circle of Life (Madhaniyan)
A Life Worth Living (Kesariyo)
Greatest Happiness (Aj Din Shagna Da)

Accolades

[edit]
Film Award Category Result Ref.
Phillauri 10th Mirchi Music Awards Upcoming Music Composer of The Year for "Bajaake Tumba" Nominated [24]
Upcoming Music Composer of The Year for "Sahiba" Nominated
Best Song Engineer (Recording & Mixing) for "Naughty Billo" Nominated
Uri: The Surgical Strike 66th National Film Awards National Film Award for Best Music Direction Won [25]
65th Filmfare Awards Best Background Score Nominated [26]
R. D. Burman Award Won
21st IIFA Awards Best Background Score Won
Euphoria And The Following Realties The Production Music Awards 2021 Best World Music for "Bliss" Nominated [27]
Best World Music for "Dharma" Won [28]
PRS Foundation Best Newcomer Won

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Shashwat Sachdev is an Indian composer, musician, singer, and lyricist specializing in film scores, particularly for action and patriotic themes in Bollywood cinema. He achieved breakthrough recognition with the background score for Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019), earning the National Film Award for Best Music Direction at the 66th National Film Awards. Sachdev's notable works include compositions for Phillauri (2017), Veere Di Wedding (2018), Tejas (2023), and Article 370 (2024), often blending orchestral elements with Indian instrumentation to evoke emotional and narrative intensity. In October 2025, he made history as the first Indian composer to co-create a title theme with Oscar-winning composer Hans Zimmer for the British crime series Virdee. Beyond films, Sachdev maintains an independent music career, releasing tracks that have garnered millions of streams on platforms like Spotify.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Shashwat Sachdev was born in Jaipur, Rajasthan, into a middle-class family hailing from a Tier II or III city. His father, Sudhir Sachdev, holds the position of Vice Chancellor at Mahatma Gandhi University of Medical Sciences & Technology, while his mother, Mani Sachde, works as a lecturer at Manipal University, Jaipur. The family lacked a professional musical heritage but included music enthusiasts, with Sachdev's mother playing a key role in introducing him to the art form. He has one sibling, a sister named Sahiba Tandon, who pursued a career in architecture. From an early age, Sachdev displayed a innate affinity for music, which his parents nurtured through significant personal sacrifices to support his development. He commenced formal training at age three under the tutelage of Ustad Ramzan Khan, embarking on two decades of rigorous study in Hindustani classical music, including vocals and rhythm. This foundational period in Jaipur laid the groundwork for his lifelong commitment to the discipline, blending familial encouragement with disciplined practice despite the non-musical professional environment.

Musical Awakening and Training

Shashwat Sachdev's interest in music emerged early in childhood, with formal training commencing at the age of three under the guidance of Ustad Ramzan Khan. His initial lessons emphasized Hindustani classical vocals and rhythm, laying the foundation for a rigorous apprenticeship in the guru-shishya tradition. This early immersion, starting around age three and a half, marked the onset of his systematic musical education in Jaipur, where he was born. Sachdev pursued intensive training in Hindustani classical music with Ustad Ramzan Khan for 21 years, developing proficiency in vocal techniques and rhythmic structures central to the tradition. Complementing this, he studied Western classical piano for 11 years, broadening his harmonic and instrumental skills to bridge Indian and global musical frameworks. These dual influences fostered a versatile foundation, enabling him to later integrate classical elements into contemporary compositions without formal institutional degrees in music. Throughout his formative years, Sachdev's training remained rooted in traditional mentorship rather than modern conservatory programs, prioritizing oral transmission and repetitive practice over theoretical abstraction. This approach, as he later reflected, equipped him to appreciate the improvisational depth of Hindustani music, influencing his advocacy for its relevance among younger generations. By his early twenties, this extensive preparation had honed his ability to compose across genres, though he credits the unyielding discipline of classical rigor for sustaining his career trajectory.

Career Trajectory

Hollywood Foundations (2011–2016)

In 2011, Shashwat Sachdev relocated to Los Angeles to launch his professional music career, focusing on building foundational experience in the Hollywood industry. He engaged in various projects, including mixing and production work, which allowed him to hone his skills in contemporary scoring and collaboration within a competitive environment. During this period, Sachdev collaborated with established professionals such as Grammy-winning mixer Tony Maserati, as well as composer Marc Shaiman, providing him exposure to high-level production techniques and diverse musical applications. These partnerships contributed to his development as a versatile composer, emphasizing technical proficiency in orchestration and sound design tailored to visual media, though specific credited film scores from this era remain undocumented in public filmographies. By 2016, after five years of immersion in Hollywood's ecosystem, Sachdev returned to India, carrying forward the technical and creative insights gained from these formative endeavors to inform his subsequent work in Indian cinema. This phase marked a deliberate foundational buildup rather than immediate high-profile breakthroughs, aligning with a strategic approach to career progression in global music production.

Breakthrough in Indian Cinema (2017–2020)

Shashwat Sachdev entered Bollywood as a with the Phillauri, released on March 24, , where he created the original soundtrack, including the upbeat track "" featuring vocals by Romy and Vivek Hariharan, which blended folk and contemporary elements to suit the 's period setting. The received positive for its melodic integration with the , marking Sachdev's first major feature after prior independent and work. In 2018, Sachdev composed four songs for the ensemble comedy Veere Di Wedding, including "Pappi Le Loon" sung by Sunidhi Chauhan and himself, "Bhangra Ta Sajda (No One Gives a Damn)" with Neha Kakkar and Romy, "Laaj Sharam" by Enbee and Shashwat, and the ballad "Aa Jao Na" featuring Arijit Singh. These tracks emphasized high-energy Punjabi rhythms and emotional depth, aligning with the film's themes of female friendship and defiance, though critics noted the soundtrack's mixed commercial reception amid the movie's focus on dialogue over music. He also contributed background score to Kaalakaandi, a dark comedy released January 12, 2018, supporting its chaotic narrative with tense, urban percussion layers. Sachdev's profile elevated significantly with URI: The Surgical Strike, a military action film released January 11, 2019, for which he composed both the original songs—like the patriotic "Challa" earning a 2020 Critics' Award nomination for Best Male Vocalist—and the background score, earning the 66th National Film Award for Best Music Direction (Background Score) announced August 9, 2019. The score's intense orchestral and electronic elements, drawing from real military operations for authenticity, were praised for heightening the film's tension and emotional resonance, contributing to its critical and audience acclaim. The movie grossed ₹245.36 crore nett in India (₹289.68 crore gross), ranking among Bollywood's top earners that year and amplifying Sachdev's recognition for war-themed compositions.

Expansion into Streaming and Recent Projects (2021–Present)

In 2021, Sachdev released his Euphoria (And the Following Realities), an collection blending cinematic with global musical influences, marking his pivot toward independent productions amid growing for versatile scoring in digital formats. This was followed by Shades of Cashmere in 2022, featuring tracks that incorporated ethnic and electronic elements, further establishing his profile in sync licensing for streaming and media. Sachdev expanded into streaming with the soundtrack for Netflix's The Ba**ds of Bollywood* in 2025, a series of music videos directed by , where he composed, produced, and arranged tracks such as "Tu Pehli Tu Aakhri" featuring and "Behad" with Faheem Abdullah, emphasizing Bollywood's dramatic flair fused with contemporary beats. The project's score was recorded with the Synchron Stage , highlighting his integration of live orchestral elements for digital platforms. In 2024, he composed and background score for the Article 370, including songs like "Ishq Tera" and "," which underscored the film's tense with pulsating rhythms and thematic motifs from Kashmiri influences. This work preceded his entry into international streaming via co-composing the theme for the and iPlayer crime series Virdee in 2025, partnering with —the first such between an Indian composer and the Oscar winner—infusing Eastern textures into a Western thriller aesthetic. For the action film Dhurandhar, set for release in December 2025, Sachdev delivered the title track featuring Ranveer Singh, Hanumankind, and Jasmine Sandlas, blending Punjabi folk with hip-hop and orchestral swells to evoke high-stakes intensity. These projects reflect his broadening scope from theatrical Indian cinema to global streaming, leveraging hybrid scoring techniques for narrative-driven episodic content.

Discography

Film and Series Compositions

Shashwat Sachdev has composed background scores and select songs for numerous Bollywood films, often emphasizing orchestral elements in action, war, and thriller genres, alongside contributions to streaming series. His works include collaborations with established directors and, more recently, international composers. In 2017, Sachdev served as co-composer for Phillauri, blending folk influences with contemporary orchestration. He followed with music department contributions to Kaalakaandi (2018) and Veere Di Wedding (2018), focusing on urban-themed tracks. That year, he also scored the Netflix series Selection Day, adapting to narrative-driven episodic formats. Sachdev's score for Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) marked a pivotal achievement, earning the 66th National Film Award for Best Background Score for its tense, militaristic sound design. Subsequent film scores include Attack (2022), Tejas (2023)—part of his self-described "war trilogy" alongside Uri—and Kill (2023), noted for high-intensity action cues. In 2024, he composed for Article 370 and Ulajh, incorporating patriotic and suspenseful motifs. Upcoming projects feature scores for Kesari Chapter 2: The Untold Story of Jallianwala Bagh (2025) and co-composition duties on the British series The Ba**ds of Bollywood* (2025), marking his first collaboration with Hans Zimmer.
YearTitleTypeRole/Notes
2017PhillauriFilmCo-composer with Sameer Uddin
2018KaalakaandiFilmComposer
2018Veere Di WeddingFilmMusic department
2018–2019Selection DaySeriesComposer (Netflix original)
2019Uri: The Surgical StrikeFilmBackground score; National Award winner
2022AttackFilmComposer
2023TejasFilmComposer (war genre)
2023KillFilmComposer
2024Article 370FilmBackground score
2024UlajhFilmComposer
2025Kesari Chapter 2FilmComposer
2025The Ba***ds of BollywoodSeriesCo-composer with Hans Zimmer

Independent Releases and Albums

Shashwat Sachdev initiated his independent music endeavors through singles released under IndieA Records, a label backed by Universal Music India and launched in 2022 to promote indie artists. His debut single, "Awaara Ho", issued on August 10, 2022, was written, composed, and sung by Sachdev, with a dream-pop version featuring Shilpa Rao; the track portrays the transient essence of romantic connections. Further singles followed, including "Ek Ghar" and "Paris London Amsterdam" featuring Aanchal Tyagi, both released in 2022 as part of his push into non-film music. Additional independent tracks encompass "Dobara" featuring Shreya Jain, "O Jaana", and "Meri Jaan" in collaboration with Jubin Nautiyal. In 2023, Sachdev unveiled his inaugural independent album Sha, a collection of eight original tracks totaling 28 minutes. The album includes "Baaton Baaton Main" featuring Anumita Nadesan, "Awaara Ho", "Tumhe Na Chahne Ko", and "Paris London Amsterdam" featuring Aanchal Tyagi, reflecting his shift toward personal songwriting and production outside cinematic constraints.

Musical Style and Innovations

Core Techniques and Influences

Shashwat Sachdev's musical foundation draws from extensive training in Hindustani classical music under Ustad Ramzan Khan for 21 years, beginning at age three with vocals and rhythm, complemented by 11 to 15 years of Western classical piano studies. This dual heritage, rooted in the Sikar gharana of Hindustani tradition, informs his integration of raga structures and folk elements with Western orchestration. Additional influences include global folk traditions encountered through travels to cities like Paris, Prague, and Berlin, which inspire novel sonic explorations, as well as minimalist philosophy derived from a paternal anecdote about Michelangelo's sculpting process—emphasizing subtraction to reveal essential expression. Composers such as Johann Johannsson have also shaped his experimental leanings, prompting acquisitions like modular synthesizers from Berlin's SchneidersLaden for atmospheric textures. In composition, Sachdev employs fusion techniques that merge Indian classical and folk motifs with modern electronica, rock, and sophisticated production methods, often breaking from conventional cinematic constraints to forge hybrid soundscapes. He incorporates unconventional tools like modular synthesizers for ominous, evolving tones and leverages technology for improvisation-heavy processes, as seen in tracks blending a cappella vocals with electronic beats. A hallmark is his minimalist restraint, using sparse instrumentation to heighten emotional core—exemplified by stripping hip-hop elements from scenes in Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) to favor silence or subtle cues, developed over eight months of background scoring with a Vienna-recorded German orchestra. For film scoring, Sachdev devises leitmotifs and comprehensive "bibles" to retroactively align music with narrative arcs, reimagining traditional ragas or folk tunes—such as in "Na De Dil Pardesi Nu (Jogi)" from Dhurandhar (2025)—into cinematic hip-hop or epic forms while preserving organic narrative fit through director collaborations. He collaborates with native musicians across regions, as in assembling over 50 performers from eight Indian cities for the Euphoria album (2021), to capture authentic cultural timbres before layering contemporary production. This approach balances grandeur with nuance, drawing from daily film analysis to evoke visual worlds, as evident in his work with international figures like Hans Zimmer.

Signature Approaches in Scoring

Shashwat Sachdev's scoring emphasizes the creation of immersive soundscapes that actively shape narrative visuals rather than merely supporting them, often evoking specific imagery through layered sonic elements. He integrates Hindustani classical structures, such as ragas for melodic foundation, with Western orchestral techniques and modern production tools to forge hybrid compositions that bridge cultural traditions. This approach draws from his dual training in Indian classical music—under mentors like Ustad Ramzan Khan on tabla and vocals—and Western notation systems, enabling precise collaboration with international ensembles while preserving organic emotional depth. A hallmark technique involves reworking regional Indian folk melodies into contemporary cinematic contexts, such as transforming Punjabi folk into hip-hop-infused cues, as seen in the track "Na De Dil Pardesi Nu" for Dhurandhar (2025), where traditional elements underpin high-tension action sequences. Sachdev employs leitmotifs to construct expansive "sonic universes," recurring motifs that evolve to mirror character arcs and thematic shifts, evident in the epic rom-com score for The Ba**ds of Bollywood* (2025), which balances grandeur with intimate nuance. He tailors these to script demands, collaborating closely with directors like Aditya Dhar to embed organic sounds—such as field recordings or native instrumentation—directly into pivotal scenes, enhancing realism in military thrillers like Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019). Unconventional methods, including technology-driven experimentation and global jamming sessions, allow Sachdev to break from rigid Bollywood scoring conventions, incorporating influences from travels to Europe and collaborations with over 50 musicians across eight Indian regions for albums like Euphoria (And The Following Realities) (2022). This results in innovative fusions, such as blending world folk with classical Western orchestras via digital processing, prioritizing awe-inspiring textures over formulaic arrangements to elevate emotional tangents in action-oriented narratives.

Reception and Impact

Awards and Critical Acclaim

Shashwat Sachdev received the National Film Award for Best Background Score at the 66th National Film Awards in 2019 for his work on Uri: The Surgical Strike, recognizing the score's contribution to the film's tense action sequences. He also won the Filmfare R.D. Burman Award for New Music Talent at the 65th Filmfare Awards in 2020, honoring emerging composers for innovative contributions. In 2021, Sachdev was awarded the Best Newcomer prize, supported by the PRS Foundation, at the Production Music Awards for his track "Dharma," highlighting his entry into international production music circles. Earlier, in 2017, he secured the FOI Online Award for Best Original Song, an early nod to his songwriting in independent projects. Critical reception has praised Sachdev's scores for their intensity and cultural resonance, particularly in military-themed films, with outlets noting the National Award as validation of his ability to elevate narrative tension through orchestral and electronic elements. His 2025 collaboration with on the title theme for the British series Virdee marked him as the first Indian composer to co-work with the Oscar winner, drawing acclaim for bridging Indian and Hollywood scoring traditions. Nominations, including for Best Background Score at the Filmfare Technical Awards in 2020 and Best Music at the Screen Awards in 2019, reflect sustained industry recognition despite limited mainstream playback singing exposure.
AwardYearWork RecognizedNotes
National Film Award for Best Background Score2019Uri: The Surgical Strike66th edition; for score enhancing surgical strike realism.
Filmfare R.D. Burman Award2020Overall new talent65th edition; for debut film contributions.
PRS Foundation Best Newcomer (Production Music Awards)2021"Dharma"UK-based; for world production music innovation.

Commercial Performance and Criticisms

Shashwat Sachdev's compositions have contributed to the success of several high-grossing Indian films, particularly through background scores that enhanced narrative tension. His work on Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) supported the film's box office performance, which recorded a net collection of ₹244.14 crore in India and a worldwide gross of ₹341.75 crore, positioning it among Bollywood's top-grossing war films. Individual tracks from the soundtrack, such as "Challa," have accumulated over 34 million streams on Spotify as of October 2025, reflecting sustained digital popularity. Streaming metrics for Sachdev's other releases indicate moderate commercial traction, with songs like "Ghafoor" from the Netflix series The Ba**ds of Bollywood* (2025) reaching approximately 6.9 million Spotify streams shortly after release. His independent production album Euphoria And The Following Realities (2021), released via Extreme Music, earned recognition including a Best World Production Music award for the track "Dharma," though specific sales figures remain undisclosed. Criticisms of Sachdev's work have been limited, primarily centered on isolated allegations rather than widespread backlash. In September 2025, a social media user claimed that "Ghafoor" from The Ba**ds of Bollywood* plagiarized elements from the 2011 electronic track "Big Bad Wolf" by Duck Sauce, sparking online debate about melodic similarities, though no formal legal action or official response from Sachdev has been reported. Reviews of his film scores, such as those for Uri, have generally praised innovation but noted reliance on conventional war-film motifs without highlighting significant flaws. Overall, Sachdev's output has faced scant controversy, with commercial critiques more implicit in the niche appeal of his background-heavy style over mass-market song hits.

Industry Influence and Collaborations

Shashwat Sachdev's most prominent international collaboration occurred in October 2025, when he co-composed the title theme for the British crime series Virdee alongside two-time Academy Award winner Hans Zimmer and Emmy-winning composer James Everingham, marking the first instance of an Indian composer partnering with Zimmer on a production music project. This partnership extends Sachdev's reach beyond Indian cinema, contributing to a shift toward greater inclusion of non-Western composers in high-profile Western media scoring, as evidenced by the project's emphasis on fusing cultural elements in its sound design. In parallel, Sachdev has engaged with global production entities through his affiliation with Extreme Music, a Sony/ATV division specializing in sync licensing for film and television; there, he released the album Euphoria (And The Following Realities) in collaboration with producer Magic Shruti, incorporating recordings from over 50 musicians across eight Indian cities to create fusion tracks available for international use. Domestically, Sachdev composed for director Aryan Khan's 2025 web series The Ba**ds of Bollywood*, integrating original scores that blend traditional and contemporary styles. He has also partnered with Indian hip-hop artist Hanumankind and vocalist Jasmine Sandlas on songs for the film Dhurandhar (2025), adapting rap and melodic elements to action-oriented narratives. Earlier works include sessions with mixing engineer Tony Maserati, composer Marc Shaiman, and singer Katherine McPhee, reflecting Sachdev's efforts to incorporate Western production techniques into his Bollywood and independent outputs as of 2023. These alliances position Sachdev as a conduit for hybrid music practices, enabling Indian folk and classical motifs to influence global licensing catalogs and cross-genre film scores.

Personal Life and Views

Private Life and Entrepreneurship

Shashwat Sachdev was born in Jaipur, Rajasthan, into a family with a professional academic background; his father, Sudhir Sachdev, serves as vice chancellor at Mahatma Gandhi University of Medical Sciences and Technology (MGUMST), while his mother, Mani Sachde, is a lecturer at Manipal University in Jaipur. He has one sister, Sahiba Tandon, who works as an architect. Sachdev pursued formal education in law, earning a degree from Symbiosis Law School in Pune between 2006 and 2011, though he shifted focus to music early in life despite his family's non-musical orientation. He is married to Shruti Sachdev (née Shruti Siag) and maintains a relatively private personal life, with limited public details beyond his interest in travelling. In parallel with his music composition career, Sachdev has engaged in entrepreneurship as a director of SHA Future Machine Private Limited, a Mumbai-based entity incorporated on August 20, 2020, classified under activities related to amusement, recreation, and entertainment services (CIN: U92490MH2020PTC344116). The company's registered address is linked directly to Sachdev's residence in Andheri West, Mumbai, suggesting personal involvement in its operations, potentially extending his musical expertise into production or event-related ventures. This directorial role, documented via his Director Identification Number (DIN: 08840344), represents a formal step into business ownership beyond freelance scoring.

Public Statements on Industry Challenges

Shashwat Sachdev has addressed challenges in entering the Indian film music industry, noting in a 2021 interview that as a newcomer from a Tier II or III city with a middle-class background, success depends more on audience reception than industry gatekeepers, emphasizing that "if anybody can actually welcome you, it is the audience." He highlighted resource constraints in his early career, yet credited limited means with contributing to the innovative score for Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019), which earned a National Film Award. Regarding prevailing trends like remixes, Sachdev expressed strong reservations in the same interview, stating, "Do I want to remix music? No! Will I do it? No! Do I want to talk about it? No!" while acknowledging the value in revisiting past works but prioritizing original compositions amid what he views as an overreliance on recycled material in commercial music. On musical education and foundational training, Sachdev has critiqued the declining emphasis on classical music among young aspirants, observing in 2020 that it is rarely incorporated into commercial tracks despite its influence on global genres like pop and blues, and that 99% of emerging musicians lack understanding of raag and melody structures. He attributed this gap to systemic barriers in India, including financial limitations and insufficient parental awareness preventing access to qualified gurus, describing the country as a "third-world" context for such development, and advocated for self-education via platforms like Instagram to bridge these divides. In discussions of social media's role, Sachdev viewed short-form content like Instagram Reels not as a detriment but as a facilitator for instant feedback and audience connection, noting in 2022 that it enabled boosts in streams for his Uri soundtrack and allowed "good musicians to voice themselves" in a worshipful Indian market, countering potential complaints by emphasizing adaptive opportunities over traditional barriers. Comparing Indian and international workflows, Sachdev described challenges in cross-cultural scoring during his 2024 collaboration with Hans Zimmer on the BBC series Virdee, where integrating Indian upbringing influences into a "western palette" required careful reflection for an Indian-UK community narrative, alongside procedural differences such as India's "flexible and fluid" scheduling versus the "more disciplined" clarity abroad.

References

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