When I speak of a culturally-rooted song or singer, I am not invoking purity, nationalism, or a closed idea of tradition. I am pointing instead to a form of grounding, an attentiveness to the historical, social, and embodied conditions from which artistic work emerges.
Cultures have never developed in isolation. They have always been shaped through encounter: through migration and trade, conflict and conquest, translation and transformation. What is often described as “national culture” is therefore never singular or complete. It is internally differentiated, shaped by geography, class, education, family inheritance, and uneven access to cultural and social capital. Culture is lived not as a unified inheritance, but as a plurality of experiences, pressures, and dispositions.
In this sense, rootedness does not describe an essence one possesses. It names a position one speaks from, historically, socially, and contingently. It is not a matter of remaining inside a tradition, but of understanding how one stands in relation to it.
To compose or sing within a contemporary genre is already to step into an intercultural space. No artist working today is untouched by external influence, nor could they be. The question is not whether cultures meet, but how that meeting is inhabited. A culture that attempts to insulate itself from outside experience does not preserve its vitality; it risks becoming still, repeating inherited forms long after their living meaning has begun to fade.
A culturally-rooted practice, as I understand it, does not resist exchange. It resists amnesia. It does not seek to recover a lost past, nor to reenact tradition as a fixed image. Rather, it approaches inheritance as something active and demanding, something carried forward with awareness, negotiated in the present, and reshaped through practice.
Pierre Bourdieu’s work reminds us that cultural formation is never neutral. Taste, judgement, and aesthetic dispositions are shaped through socialization: through family inheritance, ethics and values, education, language, and the forms of exposure that allow certain kinds of attention to develop. Some works ask more of us, time, patience, sustained listening, and access to these demands is never evenly distributed. These conditions shape us deeply, yet they do not fully determine us. Movement remains possible, though rarely effortless. Dispositions are embodied and not social roles that can be assumed or set aside at will.
To acknowledge this is not to rank cultures or forms hierarchically, nor to diminish marginal or hybrid expressions. It is simply to recognise that artistic choices arise within unequal conditions, and that seriousness of practice begins with attentiveness to those conditions.
Discernment, in this sense, is not a claim to superiority. It is a commitment to attention: to listening closely, allowing complexity to remain unresolved, and resisting the pressure to reduce meaning for immediacy or effect.
This understanding of cultural rootedness sits at the centre of how I approach collaboration.
The collaborations I am interested in do not begin with genre, identity, or aesthetic alignment. They begin with dispositions, with how an artist listens, how they relate to inheritance, and how they inhabit the space between what has shaped them and what they are becoming.
Collaboration here is not a merging of styles, nor an act of borrowing or representation. It is a meeting of grounded practices: a shared willingness to remain present to difference, between traditions, between social positions, between ways of hearing and making, without rushing to resolve it.
What I seek is not agreement, but seriousness. Not sameness, but reciprocity. A recognition that artistic work, at its most alive, unfolds in the tension between continuity and transformation.
If these ideas resonate, then the collaboration has already begun, quietly, and in thought, which is where all meaningful work starts.
Honoring cultural wisdom through song — enabling voices to resonate beyond borders.