Chandrika Tandon
Chandrika Krishnamurthy Tandon (born 1954) is an Indian-American businesswoman, philanthropist, and Grammy Award-winning musician renowned for blending her expertise in global consulting with artistic pursuits in Hindustani, Carnatic, and Western vocal traditions to promote human happiness and cultural unity.[1][2][3] Born in Madras (now Chennai), India, Tandon grew up in a conservative Tamil family in a small town alongside her younger brother and sister, the latter being former PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi.[1][4] She earned her undergraduate degree from Madras Christian College and an MBA from the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, after which she moved to the United States in 1979.[2][5] Tandon joined McKinsey & Company in 1979, working in the New York office until 1990, and became the first Indian woman to achieve partner status at the firm, specializing in business transformation and institutional rebuilding.[6][7] After leaving McKinsey, she founded and chairs Tandon Capital Associates, an advisory firm focused on organizational change, with her husband, Ranjan Tandon, who leads the hedge fund Libra Advisors.[8][9] In her musical career, Tandon has released seven albums under her label Soul Chants Music, including the chart-topping Soul Call and the 2024 collaborative album Triveni with flutist Wouter Kellerman and cellist Eru Matsumoto, which earned her a Grammy Award in 2025 for Best New Age, Ambient, or Chant Album—her second nomination following a previous one in 2011.[2][10][3] She performs benefit concerts worldwide at venues like the Kennedy Center and Lincoln Center, often fusing classical Indian ragas with global sounds to support humanitarian causes.[11] As a philanthropist, Tandon and her husband donated $100 million to New York University in 2015, leading to the renaming of its engineering school as the NYU Tandon School of Engineering; she serves as vice chair of NYU's Board of Trustees and on boards at Yale University and NYU Langone Health.[8][9] Her contributions to education and the arts have earned her honors including the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, induction into the Horatio Alger Association and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Gallatin Medal from NYU.[2][1]Early life and education
Family and childhood
Chandrika Krishnamurthy Tandon was born in 1954 in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India, into a conservative Tamil Brahmin family.[7][4] She was the eldest of three siblings, including her younger sister Indra Nooyi, who later became the CEO of PepsiCo, and a younger brother.[1][12] Her father, Krishnamurthy, worked as a banker, while her mother, Shantha Krishnamurthy, was a musician whose influence permeated the household.[13][14] The family emphasized education and cultural values typical of a middle-class Tamil Brahmin upbringing, fostering a close-knit environment.[12][15] Growing up in Chennai, Tandon was immersed in Indian classical music and spirituality from an early age, shaped by her mother's artistic pursuits and the family's devotional traditions.[4] This exposure sparked her lifelong interest in music, as household activities often revolved around Carnatic music performances and spiritual practices.[13] The conservative family setting also instilled discipline and a strong sense of cultural identity, with Tandon navigating the expectations of being the eldest daughter in a traditional Brahmin home.[7] In 1978, at the age of 24, Tandon immigrated to the United States for a job opportunity at McKinsey & Company, marking the beginning of her life as an immigrant.[12] She later married Ranjan Tandon, an engineer-turned-investor, and the couple had a daughter, Lita Tandon, born in 1988.[16][17][18]Academic background
Chandrika Tandon completed her undergraduate education at Madras Christian College, affiliated with the University of Madras, earning a Bachelor of Commerce degree in 1973.[19][20] Following her bachelor's degree, Tandon pursued a postgraduate program in management at the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad (IIM-A), graduating in 1975 as part of the Post Graduate Programme (PGP) class that marked one of the institution's early cohorts to admit women, where she was among only eight female students selected from thousands of applicants.[1][21] Her studies at IIM-A provided foundational exposure to economics, strategic management, and business principles, equipping her with analytical skills essential for her future career.[22]Professional career
Consulting roles
Chandrika Tandon joined McKinsey & Company in 1979, becoming one of the first Indian-American women to enter the firm at a time when diversity in consulting was limited.[6][23] Based in the New York office, she specialized in financial services, focusing on business transformation, efficiency improvements, and profitability strategies for major institutions.[24][1] During her tenure, Tandon contributed to high-impact projects in the financial sector, including strategic advisory work for banks such as Chase Manhattan Bank, helping to navigate industry restructuring and operational challenges.[1] Her efforts emphasized rebuilding underperforming organizations, drawing on her expertise to deliver measurable enhancements in client performance.[24] In the mid-1980s, Tandon was promoted to partner after approximately six years with the firm, marking her as the first Indian-American woman to achieve this position at McKinsey.[25][26] This milestone, following five years in the role until her departure, underscored her leadership in a male-dominated field and advanced diversity by exemplifying pathways for women and South Asian professionals in global consulting.[6][12] She remained with McKinsey until 1990, contributing to the firm's growth in financial services practice while breaking gender and cultural barriers through her professional achievements.[6][1]Entrepreneurial ventures
In 1992, Chandrika Tandon founded Tandon Capital Associates, a boutique investment banking advisory firm focused on financial restructuring and strategic transformation for global institutions.[1][27] As the firm's chairman and CEO, Tandon led its operations, emphasizing mergers, acquisitions, and high-level consulting to enhance operational efficiency and market value for clients in the financial sector.[9][28] The firm's scope centered on advising major banks and financial entities through complex integrations and strategic overhauls, often generating significant economic impact. Tandon Capital Associates provided senior advisory services to institutions such as Bank of America, where it supported post-acquisition integrations including those involving Fleet Financial Group and Bank of Boston; other notable clients included Chase Manhattan Corporation, Unibanco of Brazil, Suncorp-Metway Ltd. of Australia, Rabobank, and ABN Amro.[1][29][28] Under Tandon's leadership, the firm experienced substantial growth, restructuring preeminent financial institutions worldwide and creating billions of dollars in market value through targeted advisory engagements.[26][1] As of 2025, Tandon continues to serve as founder and chair of Tandon Capital Associates, maintaining its focus on transformative financial consulting.[9][6]Philanthropic activities
Establishment of foundations
In 2004, Chandrika Tandon founded the Krishnamurthy Tandon Foundation, a private nonprofit organization based in New York City, named in honor of her family's heritage and dedicated to philanthropic causes.[27] The foundation was established to partner with organizations advancing community building, arts, and spirituality, drawing inspiration from Tandon's Indian roots to promote values of cultural continuity and human well-being.[6][9] The foundation's mission centers on elevating human happiness through economic and emotional empowerment, with key focus areas including education, women's empowerment, spirituality, and the arts, reflecting Tandon's commitment to sustainable livelihoods and cultural enrichment.[9][6] It supports initiatives in both the United States and India, fostering programs that build community resilience and preserve artistic traditions.[30] Governance is family-oriented, with Chandrika Tandon serving as chair, her husband Ranjan Tandon as director, and their daughter Lita Tandon as a board member, ensuring aligned decision-making rooted in shared values.[30][31] Over the years, the foundation's priorities have evolved to emphasize cultural preservation alongside its core pillars, particularly through grants supporting artistic and spiritual endeavors that honor Indian heritage while addressing contemporary global needs, with ongoing activities extending into 2025.[32]Key donations and initiatives
In 2015, Chandrika Tandon and her husband Ranjan Tandon donated $100 million to New York University's Polytechnic School of Engineering, the largest philanthropic gift in the institution's history at the time, which supported faculty recruitment, new academic programs, and scholarships for underrepresented students, leading to the school's renaming as the NYU Tandon School of Engineering.[33] This contribution has enhanced research in areas like cybersecurity and wireless communications, contributing to the school's improved national rankings and increased enrollment of first-generation and women students in STEM fields.[34] Tandon has supported arts organizations through the Krishnamurthy Tandon Foundation, which has provided grants to over 30 institutions focused on cultural programs and community arts initiatives.[32] Her philanthropy extends to spiritual centers, notably through performances and benefit concerts for the Art of Living Foundation's events, such as leading a choir of 300 participants in "Vande Mataram" at the 2023 World Culture Festival on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., which drew over 1.1 million attendees to promote global unity and wellness.[35][36] In education for underserved communities, Tandon's foundation has funded programs to improve access in developing regions, including a $2 million commitment to her alma mater, Madras Christian College in Chennai, India, comprising an initial $1 million donation in 2024 and a matching $1 million grant in January 2025, establishing the Boyd-Tandon School of Business to offer business education to students from low-income backgrounds.[37] As of 2025, Tandon has expanded initiatives in women's education, emphasizing STEM opportunities for girls through targeted scholarships at NYU Tandon that cover tuition and research stipends for female students, in addition to her foundation's support for higher education including endowed faculty chairs at Yale and Harvard Universities.[38] Her global community building projects, channeled via the foundation, have supported infrastructure like wellness centers and educational facilities in rural India and the U.S., reaching thousands of beneficiaries through partnerships that provide vocational training and emotional well-being programs.[32]Artistic career
Musical background and style
Chandrika Tandon's musical journey began with exposure to Indian classical traditions during her childhood in Chennai, where her family's home featured regular music lessons and her mother played the veena, fostering an early affinity for melody. She received formal training in Carnatic and Hindustani classical music from renowned gurus, including Shubhra Guha and Girish Wazalwar, as well as T. Viswanathan, Pandit Jasraj, Veena Sahasrabuddhe, and Vijay Kichlu, whom she sought out in India despite her demanding professional life. Upon relocating to the United States, Tandon expanded her studies to include Western classical traditions, drawing influences from jazz, rock, and choral music encountered through her global travels and residence in New York.[7][39][40] In her professional development, Tandon became largely self-taught in composition, beginning to create original works in the early 2000s while balancing her career in consulting and entrepreneurship. She integrated ancient Vedic chants and Sanskrit mantras with elements of world music and ambient sounds, often collaborating with musicians to layer traditional Indian instruments like the sarod and sitar alongside Western ones such as the saxophone, piano, and cello. This period marked her shift toward music as a parallel vocation, culminating in the founding of her Soul Chants Music label in 2009 to produce transformative recordings rooted in spiritual healing.[41][40][42] Tandon's signature style is characterized by a fusion of Indian classical foundations with global sonic palettes, emphasizing spiritual and emotional depth through sound healing. Her compositions blend the purity of ragas and devotional themes with contemporary harmonies, incorporating multilingual lyrics in Sanskrit, English, and occasionally Tamil to evoke universality and introspection. This approach preserves the meditative essence of Vedic traditions while making them accessible, often evoking a sense of transcendence amid modern life's complexities.[43][44][45] A pivotal milestone came in the mid-2000s when Tandon decided to pursue music professionally alongside her business endeavors, recording her debut album Soul Mantra: Om Namah Shivaya in 2004, which was released in 2005 as a personal gift that evolved into a broader artistic commitment. This choice reflected her lifelong passion, allowing her to channel rigorous classical training into innovative works that bridge cultural divides and promote well-being.[41][40]Recordings and discography
Her debut album Soul Mantra: Om Namah Shivaya was initially released in 2005 on Navras Records and re-released under Soul Chants Music in 2014. Chandrika Tandon has released seven albums under her non-profit label, Soul Chants Music, blending classical Indian ragas, Vedic chants, and fusion elements to explore themes of healing, transcendence, and emotional well-being.[46][44] Her recordings feature original compositions, including multi-raga interpretations of sacred mantras, and have achieved notable recognition, such as topping world music charts with her debut and earning Grammy accolades.[11] No standalone singles or EPs have been released outside these full-length projects. Her discography emphasizes meditative and inspirational content, often drawing from Sanskrit texts and personal spiritual journeys, with collaborators on select works enhancing cross-cultural fusions.| Album Title | Release Date | Label | Key Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soul Call | October 6, 2009 | Soul Chants Music | Nine-track album featuring the mantra "Om Namo Narayanaya" rendered in eight ragas; Grammy-nominated in 2011 for Best Contemporary World Music Album; focused on healing and spiritual invocation.[47][48][49] |
| Soul March | 2013 | Soul Chants Music | Tribute to Mahatma Gandhi's Salt March, centered on the bhajan "Raghupati Raghava Raja Ram"; emphasizes themes of non-violence and unity.[46][50] |
| Soul Mantra | 2014 | Soul Chants Music | Exploration of "Om Namah Shivaya" across nine ragas; promotes inner peace through devotional chanting.[46][50] |
| Shivoham – The Quest | September 15, 2017 | Soul Chants Music | Three-disc set depicting a personal quest in three movements (yearning, searching, connecting); merges Sanskrit and English lyrics with original compositions on self-realization.[46][50] |
| Ammu's Treasures | September 7, 2023 | Soul Chants Music | Three-disc compilation with 35 classic songs and 21 chants; designed for all ages, featuring soothing Vedic and fusion tracks for emotional upliftment.[46][51][50] |
| Triveni | August 30, 2024 | Soul Chants Music | Seven-track collaborative album with flutist Wouter Kellerman and percussionist Eru Matsumoto; original fusions of Indian classical, African, and Japanese elements for healing resonance; won the 2025 Grammy Award for Best New Age, Ambient, or Chant Album.[52][3][53] |
| Soul Ecstasy | August 28, 2025 (streaming) | Soul Chants Music | Seventh album fusing Indian classical roots with Western influences; immersive tracks on inner joy and divine ecstasy, building on her signature style of transcendent compositions.[46][43][54][50] |