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Our Story

Raaga Experience began with a simple idea - that Indian classical music deserves to be felt, not just heard.

We wanted to create something that brings people closer to music in ways that are immersive, emotionally real, and deeply rooted in India’s cultural and spiritual fabric. What started as a conversation quickly turned into a spark, and soon, the vision for Raaga Experience began to take shape. A space where music, travel, and storytelling come together to create something unforgettable.

Our first concept was Raaga Trails, a musical journey across India through immersive, culturally rich travel experiences. While we were still working out the details, we decided to try something small. A dry run, just to see how it would feel. That turned into The Temple Series. And in just 50 days from the day Raaga was born, we were standing at our very first event.

A week before that evening unfolded, the idea of Sound Scapes found us - an experience where music and nature meet in perfect conversation.

Since then, it has been a wild, beautiful ride. We have poured our energy, imagination, and a whole lot of heart into every detail. Sleepless nights, too much coffee, last minute chaos, building a website from scratch, choosing artists, figuring out what it means to even plan an event, finding venues, printing invites, chasing sponsors - we have done it all. And we have done it with one thing in mind.

Music.

We didn’t come from the world of events.

We came with a feeling - one we believed was worth sharing. Raaga Experience is our way of offering that feeling to you.

Because for us, it always begins with the music. Everything else just follows.

Meet our Team

Dhruv Dhanda

Keeper of Vision & Rhythm

Dhruv is the vision and heartbeat of Raaga Experience. What began as a quiet love for Indian classical music has grown, under his care, into a living platform where tradition breathes with relevance and beauty in the modern world.

With degrees in Electrical Engineering, Mathematics, and an MBA from IIM Ahmedabad, Dhruv balances structure with soul. He also leads one of India’s pioneering sustainable energy companies, where for over 15 years he has helped organizations transition to cleaner, smarter futures.

Never one to seek applause or acclaim, Dhruv believes true impact is felt, not announced. For him, Raaga is about creating spaces where artists feel seen, audiences feel moved, and music becomes connection. He is the quiet force keeping it all in tune.

Dhriti Dhanda

Heart of Joy & Spirit

At just eight years old, Dhriti is the youngest and brightest thread woven into the Raaga Experience. Trained in Hindustani classical music and Kathak, she embodies a beautiful blend of discipline and delight - carrying forward traditions with the freshness of childhood wonder.

Dhriti hosted Raaga’s very first event with a natural ease that instantly made her the face and heartbeat of the stage. She adds fun, laughter, and an effortless charm to everything she touches, reminding us that Raaga is not only about preserving heritage but also about celebrating life in its most joyful rhythm.

Don’t be misled by her age - Dhriti’s presence brings warmth, energy, and a spirit of happiness that completes the Raaga family. She is, quite simply, its life force in miniature.

Divya Sharma

Curator of Story & Soul

Divya is the creative force behind Raaga Experience - part instinct, part precision, and part beautifully controlled chaos. With over 15 years in luxury travel and experiential design, she carries a gift for weaving story, spirit, and detail into experiences that leave a lasting mark.

At Raaga, she moves fluidly between artist conversations, venue walkthroughs, and audience curation - guided less by formula and more by feeling. Her strength lies in balance: tradition and risk, structure and storm, the practical and the poetic. Every choice she makes is anchored in how the experience will land - for the artist, the space, and above all, the audience.

Rooted in a deep love for Indian classical music yet open to fresh interpretations, she sees Raaga not just as an initiative but as a living canvas - a way to make music felt, remembered, and lived