advertisement
Music

Karan Aujla and Jonita Join Ed Sheeran On New 'Play (The Remixes)' EP

Reworking four of Sheeran’s Play tracks in Punjabi and Hindi, the new project emphasizes cross-border listening for the pop star’s ever-growing fanbase throughout the world.

Ed Sheeran in India

Ed Sheeran in India

Mark Surridge

Ed Sheeran is exploring Punjabi music.

This Friday (Oct. 17), the superstar British singer-songwriter is releasing Play (The Remixes), an EP exclusively featuring Punjabi (and Hindi) artists that reworks four tracks from Sheeran’s album, Play — which originally peaked at No. 6 on Billboard Canadian Albums.


The Warner Music-released project includes “Don’t Look Down,” with rapper Indian Hanumankind, singer Dhee and composer Santhosh Narayanan and the previously-released “Sapphire,” featuring Arijit Singh. Two Canadians get their time to shine, with “Heaven” featuring Jonita and “Symmetry” with Karan Aujla — both of whom starred on Billboard Canada’s Punjabi Wave cover in 2023.

advertisement

Last month, Sheeran teased his collaboration with Aujla on BBC Asian Network. While he couldn’t share too many details at the time, he said the song was “really good.” Now, it has been revealed that they re-worked “Symmetry,” a track that already infuses Punjabi beats with Sheeran’s emotional vocals. The pair shot the music video in New York, and it’s set to debut alongside the EP.

"Heaven," with the multilingual Jonita, will feature lyrics primarily in Hindi, a first for Sheeran.

During the interview, he recalled his first time singing in Punjabi was last year, with Billboard Canada’s first-ever print cover star Diljit Dosanjh, during a performance of Sheeran’s track “Lover,” in Mumbai. Although he has never sung an entire track in Punjabi, he shared his affinity for the language, calling it melodic and poetic.

Sheeran revealed that he picked up the language rather quickly, but his pronunciation needed fine-tuning. Sharing some insights on collaborating with Aujla, he said: “[I was] sitting with him and [he was] like ‘No, you say it like this.’ And I said, be really, really brutal with me. And so we sat together and he was brutally honest and we made it work.”

See on Instagram

advertisement

In July, Sheeran shared the reworked version of "Sapphire," alongside Punjabi artist Arijit Singh. The effervescent dance track mixes percussion elements of traditional Indian music with Sheeran's signature catchy melodies as he sings — in English and Punjabi — about never wanting to stop dancing with a lover whose aura shimmers. Singh adds flair to the recording with strong vocals and playing a sitar.

Play (The Remixes) will surely strengthen his fanbase in India. Three Indian cities — Bengaluru, Delhi and Mumbai — are amongst the pop star’s top streaming locations on YouTube, and he's played some big shows in the country.

Additionally, the EP elevates cross-border listening. Jonita is signed to the Canada/India joint label 91 North Records, while Aujla is signed to Warner Music Canada and Warner Music India.

Both artists have had a major year, with Aujla becoming the first-ever Punjabi-Canadian artist to play The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, and breaking records with his new album, P-Pop Culture, which debuted at No. 3 on Canadian Albums. During the first half of 2025, Jonita released two singles, seemingly entering a new era. Now, working with a mega star like Sheeran adds to their already established star power.

advertisement

advertisement
Owen Riegling
Grant W. Martin Phography

Owen Riegling

FYI

Music News Digest: Owen Riegling Wins Big at 2026 CMAOntario Awards

Also this week: Molly Johnson will launch a new album at the El Mocambo, Indigenous Peoples Month includes events in Calgary and Hamilton, Alanis Morissette and Angine de Poitrine join punk fest Riot Fest in Chicago & more.

Rising country star Owen Riegling won three trophies at the 14th annual CMAOntario Awards, held on May 31 at Port Credit Memorial Arena. Notching two wins apiece were Sacha, Jessica Sevier, and James Barker Band and, for the first time in CMAOntario history, there was a tie for breakthrough artist of the Year with Tyler Lorette and Jessica Sevier sharing the title.

Hosted by award-winning Ontario country artist Jason Blaine and Country Nights host Sam McDaid, the awards show closed out the weekend, which also included a festival, with performances by Riegling, Sully Burrows, Olivia Mae Graham, Sevier, Elyse Saunders, School House, Lorette, Cory Marks, Les Rats d’Swompe and the CMAOntario house band The Western Swing Authority.

keep readingShow less
advertisement