I like my father being the boss in my life

If you strive for excellence, success will follow

I'm not thin! I just wear clothes that make me look thin.

I love the idea of waking up to a song. It could be any song.

My break in Bollywood is definitely the high point of my life.

As someone who worships music, I believe it can never be ugly!

I've never seen a low point. I like to believe that they don't exist.

I can say this much with confidence - that I now have a sound of my own

My dad's intense love for art and music is what drove me to learn music

I do not like sweets. But if I have to choose one, it has to be rasmalai.

It’s a great feeling to be wanted but it’s more exciting to be inaccessible.

It's a great feeling to be wanted, but it's more exciting to be inaccessible.

It’s very difficult for me to appreciate my own songs as I criticise them a lot.

I truly get very emotional when I am performing and see their (Fans) love for me.

There is a very big forgiving side in me that keeps me very light in my heart and happy.

I have to say that my biggest Award is performing in front of my fans. Their love is my award.

It's not that we don't have talent in our country; the talent is, in fact, not required today.

Titles or awards are not the mark of your success. They are the beginning of a life-long sadhana.

It's nice to create something you believe in. It's even nicer to dance to your own tunes sometimes.

To me,music is oxygen & I know that someday even if I can’t sing,I can always continue listening to it.

I have always enjoyed dressing up, but I don't do it as often as I would want to, because it's time consuming.

I'm not a person who comes with bodyguards. I'm a simple jhola-kurta kind of girl. So people treat me as a buddy.

My father has been the silent force behind my success. My mother has been a constant source of guidance in my career.

The good thing is that there is a constant need for innovation, which is important in the evolution of music and sound.

Gujarat is truly vibrant. Be it handicrafts, folk music, art, costumes or food - the state offers the best of everything.

I actually have a lot of couples coming & telling me that one of my songs was instrumental in strengthening their romance.

I consider music to be very sacred and I feel I'm blessed to be born with a talent which allows me to make the best of it.

I don't have a lot of desires, you see; I feel so lucky. God has give me a lot of things already; there's nothing to ask for.

I learnt to sing in Bengali, my mother tongue, then went on to sing in Hindi, Telugu, Tamil, Gujarati and every possible Indian language.

Singing in Hindi is nice but restrictive. Regional languages are more rhythmic, have a different tone and sound, making it more interesting.

No matter where I go, I actually have a lot of couples coming and telling me that one of my songs was instrumental in strengthening their romance!

When I am not recording, I do live shows or am at home catching up on shows which I regularly watch. But there will always be some music around me.

Music reality shows provide a platform to people who have talent and gives them visibility and exposure. It is a win-win situation for participants.

I believe that when the going gets tough, you should just hit pause. Assimilate what is happening for 10 minutes. Your thoughts will be much clearer.

A studio is like a meditation room where music is created. And a live performance is the place where the creation of the studio is taken ahead. I love both.

The Indian music market is very film-oriented, and any other creative music venture doesn't receive enough support. I'd rather do singles and put them on my website.

It is immensely enjoyable to work for an album because there's a lot more creative freedom. In films sometimes, all that the makers care about is making the music commercially appealing.

I don't believe in pretending to be someone else. I'm what I actually am in real life. For instance, like any normal girl, I fight with my mother. I mean, it is just fine. In fact, I fight daily with my mother.

I don't do anything specific for the stage. I'm just myself. I can't stand still for five seconds. I'm normally quite active, so that just comes out on stage. If I see people react to me and my music, I just have to give back and express myself.

An award means a lot to me. It brings happiness along with a kind of fear. It brings fear because the award is the responsibility which audiences have put on us. So a singer winning an award should always try to give best of him to the audiences.

It is only your passion which takes you forward. So it is my gyaan to all budding singers that keep faith in your passion and prepare yourself, because you will get that opportunity sooner or later, and if you can prove yourself, people will line up for you.

If given a chance, I would really want to explore the monuments in Delhi, like Qutub Minar and the forts. I have been there as a child, but now I want to go back and understand the history and significance behind them. We take all of these things for granted in life.

I'm not superstitious about good luck charms and all that. I don't have any ring or any tangible thing as a charm. But I like to have at least one of my parents with me during my shows. It gives me strength to find their faces... or my brothers... in the audience. It comforts me.

I'd say, for me, it's cooking that gives me a space beyond music. I love food. And somehow, music and food go together so well. Cooking is very therapeutic. That preparation, the fragrance of spices, the wafting aromas - it just sweeps aside my depression, tiredness and name what you may.

I appreciate art in any form. So it applies to clothes as well. On stage, I think people prefer me in Indian outfits... in fact, it goes with the kind of songs I sing as well. Indianness in the form of a sari, or a chaniya choli or jeans with something interesting, matches my style of singing.

My parents being Bengali, we always had music in our house. My nani was a trained classical singer, who taught my mum, who, in turn, was my first teacher. Later I would travel almost 70 kms to the nearest town, Kota, to learn music from my guru Mahesh Sharmaji, who was also the principal of the music college there.

I listen to a wide range of music, from country to pop to alternative rock, as well as Indian music. You know, what excites me are new ideas. And with a lot of the international hits - from Lady Gaga to Rihanna and others - you'd find excellent production and groundbreaking ideas that lift the music to a greater realm.

I'm not a gadget freak, so to say. I own an iPhone, which I love, and would sorely love to upgrade to MacBook Air from my current MacBook Pro. But what gets me going is the technology behind the gadgets, new websites, new apps. And I'm way too much into social media - FB, Twitter and Instagram are always open on my phone.

Unfortunately, we are living in an era where plenty of songs with vulgar, objectionable lyrics are also becoming popular. It's a disturbing trend, and I feel really sad when I see small kids dancing to such numbers in television shows. In my career so far, I have refused any song whose lyrics I haven't been comfortable with.

Since I stayed in a colony where either one was an engineer or a scientist, everybody thought I would be a scientist. This was the expectation everybody had apart from my parents. Honestly, I, too, wanted to be a scientist. I think it was the way Dad would explain us scientific theories and concepts that made the subject more intriguing.

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