IT'S HARD TO IMAGINE I Arpan Kumar Chandel as anything other than the supremely self-confident young man he is today. As his manager gives me notes on his next album on the sidelines of the GQ photoshoot, Chandel struts his stuff with understated poise, completely at ease in his own skin. Even his chosen moniker-the regal, authoritative "King"-hints at a deep reservoir of self-belief. This is a man who knows what he's worth, and will take nothing less.
And why should he? Since becoming a household name on the first season of rap reality show MTV Hustle in 2019, King has released three well-received albums, broken into Spotify's global charts, bagged a collab with Nick Jonas, and is prepping for a five-country tour, no doubt the first of many. His musican amorphous but delicious khichdi of rap, contemporary pop, and R&B with a '90s Indipop garnish has become inescapable, whether you're on the dance floor or stuck in Mumbai's gridlocked traffic.
But things weren't always this way. Before the regal persona, the hit songs, the sneaker endorsements, the photoshoots, there was just Arpan-a painfully shy young boy with rock star dreams and a burning awareness of the injustice in the way the world worked. The story of Arpan's transformation into King is the sort of thing that pop-star myths are made of.
"When you're poor, the first three things you learn are: This is your mother, this is your father, and these are your financial problems," says Chandel when we sit down for a chat over coffee in the studio's dressing room. Growing up in government quarters in New Delhi's Chanakyapuri, the son of a poorly paid government employee and a housewife, Chandel knows poverty's ability to crush one's spirit firsthand. He remembers having to play with broken hand-me-down toys, the dismissive jeers of more well-to-do peers, the way class circumscribes even the futures you allow yourselves to dream of.
This story is from the June - August 2023 edition of GQ India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the June - August 2023 edition of GQ India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
In Haider We Hope
The role of a fashion designer is one usually forged in chaos and fired down by “creative differences”. But on the eve of a new Tom Ford directorship, Haider Ackermann has never felt more free.
VIVA VARUN
Varun Dhawan on balancing fatherhood and film shoots, and the pressure of making the right choices.
PRATIK GANDHI'S QUIET EUPHORIA
The actor―who delivered a knockout performance in Madgaon Expresson the high of a hit and the pressure of sustaining success.
THE COMEBACK KID
Buoyed by his performance in Singham Returns, Arjun Kapoor doubles down on creativity.
SCRIPTING STARDOM
Vicky Kaushal on the thrill and terror of stepping onto a Sanjay Leela Bhansali set, charting an unconventional career, and making sense of the money game.
A TRYST WITH STARDOM
Triptii Dimri segued from her left-field roots straight to the animal park. The gamble has paid off.
WALKING A TIGHTROPE
Following the monster success of Stree 2, Rajkummar Rao opens up about navigating artistic fulfilment and box-office glory.
THE MAHARAJA OF MEHRAULI
It's been an action-packed year for Tarun Tahiliani, the emperor of Indian couture.
LONE WARRIOR
Kartik Aaryan on why, in an industry that only watches out for its own, he has to blow his own trumpet.
HITS AND HEARTBREAKS
Filmmaker Imtiaz Ali talks about redeeming himself with the extraordinary Chamkila, dealing with star-studded setbacks, and why we've forgotten to make love stories.