Natalie Di Luccio featuring Atso Chasie and Phetsukiku Club releases song

Dimapur, July 14 (MExN): Canadian singer Natalie Di Luccio has released music video song based in Nagaland in her YouTube channel on July 13. Natalie’s latest music video is a cover of the popular song, ‘You Raise Me Up’ featuring Atso Chasie and Phetsukiku Club in Khonoma, Nagaland. The song has also garnered the attention of the Government of Nagaland as well as AR Rahman, who recently tweeted about it.

A press release issued by the Freshwater said that Natalie Di Luccio, Canadian Opera and Classical Crossover singer has built a unique and diverse body of work. She first burst into the scene in India with viral covers of Bollywood songs on her YouTube channel, and now, having sung hits in both Hindi and Tamil films and toured with AR Rahman and Sonu Nigam, is as proficient in popular Indian music as she is in Western Classical. She is well known as the Bollywood Soprano, a title that reflects the two different worlds that she inhabits, and combines with unique skill. And that is what truly sets her apart as an artist - her love for India that she expresses in her interpretations of international classics with collaborations with Indian folk artists from various states.

A prime example of this beautiful meeting of two worlds is her version of Nella Fantasia - combining the soaring melody of the Ennio Moricone classic with the earthy magic of Sawan Khan Manganiyar, setting the video in the Majestic Mehrangarh Fort in Jodhpur and showcasing its awe-inspiring beauty like never before!, it stated

Hailing from a farming family in Nagaland, Atso Chasie became obsessed with music as a mere child. And that obsession has taken him on an eventful journey to mastering the classical guitar, winning all musical competitions in Northeast India and performing in states all over India. He also teaches music in Kohima and is a Research Fellow on Naga folk songs and indigenous instruments under C.C.R.T, New Delhi.

Driven by a deep love for Naga culture and music, and recognising the need for traditional culture to evolve with changing times, Atso invented the Gei-ü, a versatile three-stringed musical instrument made out of Bison horn or bamboo that can be used in both traditional and contemporary music arrangements.

Nowhere is this evolution with changing times exemplified better than in Khonoma, a remote village in Nagaland. Home to the indigenous Angami Naga, hunting used to be a way of life in Khonoma. Once, in the early 1990s, over 300 Grey-bellied Tragopans, an endangered pheasant native to the area, were killed in just one week in a hunting competition. That was a wakeup call for the tribal elders, who resolved to change their ways so that future generations would not be denied the majesty of the local flora and fauna. The transformation of Khonoma to India’s first Green Village is nothing short of miraculous! Hunting, fishing and cutting of trees is banned, and Khonoma is now a model for sustainable interdependence with nature.

Chancing upon the idyllic village in her travels through North East India, Natalie was instantly enthralled by the beauty of Khonoma and the warmth of the Angami Naga. Meeting and interacting with Atso Chasie and the Phetsukiku Club, a youth group that surprised her with their singing prowess, inspired her to return with the express intention of collaborating with these amazing talents and creating the kind of magic that only happens when such diverse worlds meet and create together!

The idyllic environs of Khonoma form the perfect backdrop for the rousing chorus of Phetsukiku club, the haunting strains of Atso Chasie’s Gei-ü, and the goosebumps-inducing vocals of Natalie Di Luccio.