Mumbai, 1st November 2025: Rising singer-songwriter Sakshi Chopra returns with ‘Feminatti’, a dark pop revelation that transforms heartbreak into power. Blending cinematic pop production with Indian sonic textures, the track is both a declaration and a diary — a soundscape of survival, transformation, and unapologetic truth.
“I wrote this song to empower myself after a breakup”, Sakshi shares. “Feminatti is a state of mind — to be fiercely feminist, free, and in power. The name plays with mystery and strength, like a secret society of women who’ve seen too much and survived it all”.

Recorded in Los Angeles, ‘Feminatti’ emerged from a moment of creative breakthrough, following Sakshi and her band’s win in a music competition judged by Warner Brothers and Red Bull, which opened doors to sessions with Lazerbeak and Brian.
At its core, ‘Feminatti’ is a bold collision of dark pop and subtle Indian ornamentation. “One of my favourite moments was adding the sound of a payal (Indian anklet) into the track, it moves like a heartbeat beneath the production”, Sakshi explains. The result is a hypnotic pulse that carries the duality of softness and strength, much like the song’s message itself.
Stream the song here:
Visually, ‘Feminatti’ bridges dream and ritual, a golden haze of empowerment. One visual drenched in light and Hindi script contrasts with another filmed against the ocean, framed by fire dancers — both celebrating the elemental force of feminine energy. “I wanted the imagery to feel like an awakening, something between a vision and a prophecy”, she says.

Lyrically, Sakshi captures the paradox of love and independence in lines like “Rather be alone but like the company, then I want you gone’, revealing the tension between intimacy and autonomy. “I’m being more honest about the pain”, she adds. “Less about shaking ass, more about shaking truth”. With ‘Feminatti’, Sakshi Chopra ushers in a darker, braver phase of her artistry, one that redefines pop femininity through authenticity and edge. It’s not just a breakup anthem; it’s a resurrection song — a reminder that self-love will always rise from the ashes of heartbreak.

