Dhaka is one of the world’s most populous, impoverished and tumultuous cities. The Bengali capital is rich with a culture and people as vibrant and generous as they are humble and wise - Dameer is no exception. Though his lyrics address mental health, politics and heartbreak, his sound is relentlessly positive romanticism of life’s absurdity.
Dameer was thrust into the relative privilege of corporate expat life in Kuala Lumpur in his mid-teens. Out of place amid a wealthy KL youth, Dameer quietly nurtured a love for home as he settled in the Asian metropolis.
Pairing lo-fi tones with psychedelic riffs and mesmerizing vocals, the now twenty-year-old is a child of both a family of musicians and the internet, at ease with anything from indie rock to pop and jazz, citing Bangladeshi legends and the online contemporaries of his teens as inspirations for his own ethereal bridge between the East and the West.
Now, as a political science freshman at McGill, his uniquely nuanced first chapters bear the promise of a lengthy tale of global pride for Bangladesh. If the past 2 years are anything to go by, the Bengali diaspora has a lot in store for the world.
Dameer most certainly has.