Bindu Subramaniam

Bindu Subramaniam
Background information
Birth nameSeetaa Subramaniam
BornLos Angeles, United States
GenresWestern music, Carnatic, Pop
Occupation(s)Singer/Songwriter, Educator, Entrepreneur
InstrumentPiano
Years active1997–present

Bindu Subramaniam (born Seetaa Subramaniam; in Los Angeles) is an American singer-songwriter, entrepreneur, music educator, and Co-Founder and CEO of SaPa - Subramaniam Academy of Performing Arts. Bindu has been described as a "third generation prodigy" by the Hindustan Times, "a Bangalore woman changing the way children learn" by Femina Karnataka magazine[1] and an "assured young soprano" by the Times of India. In 2012, she appeared on the list of 12 gen-next achievers in Verve Magazine.[2] In 2021, she was listed as GQ Magazine's 25 most influential young Indians. She also appeared on BusinessWorld's list of women achievers,[3] and was named in their list of 40 under 40.[4]

She has performed around the world, and her first solo album was critically acclaimed and nominated for a GiMA.[5]

Bindu heads the Subramaniam Academy of Performing Arts (SaPa), an institute that trains musically inclined children to become professional performers. In 2014, she started the SaPa in Schools program, an initiative to integrate music into the mainstream academic curriculum. SaPa in Schools works with over 30,000 children across India (as of 2021).

She is the daughter of violinist Dr. L. Subramaniam, and has collaborated with him on a number of releases including Global Fusion, Visions of India and Athens.  Along with her brother Ambi Subramaniam, she started a contemporary world music band, SubraMania in 2013.[6] In 2018, she created The Thayir Sadam Project with Ambi, Carnatic fusion artist Mahesh Raghvan and mridangam player Akshay Anantapadmanabhan.  

  1. ^ "Femina Karnataka". June 2017.
  2. ^ "Verve Online".
  3. ^ "BusinessWorld". Facebook.
  4. ^ "BusinessWorld". Archived from the original on 25 February 2021.
  5. ^ "Web Archive - Thamarai". Archived from the original on 22 September 2013.
  6. ^ "Asian Age". 14 June 2018.