flutrr Partners With Saregama For Music-Led Matchmaking
Indian dating platform flutrr has announced a collaboration with Saregama, one of the country’s oldest music labels, to launch a new feature that integrates music into the matchmaking process. The partnership, unveiled in late January 2026, aims to shift focus from visual and swipe-based discovery toward emotional and cultural alignment through shared musical preferences.
The integration draws from Saregama’s extensive catalogue, enabling users to express personality, mood, and identity via music rather than relying solely on static profiles or photos. The feature creates a premium, music-centric environment where connections can begin with common tastes, memories, or emotional cues, encouraging deeper compatibility signals.
This includes mood-based discovery, shared listening experiences, and community-led interactions around songs, designed to foster natural conversations and reduce decision fatigue common in traditional swiping models. The new feature set is offered as a subscription-based premium layer.
Kaushik Banerjee, Co-Founder & CEO at flutrr, explained: “From a leadership standpoint, the fundamental challenge in modern online dating is not discovery, but depth. As platforms scaled, choice increased, but intent weakened. Dating became optimised for speed and desirability rather than understanding and compatibility. At flutrr, we believe the next phase of the category must focus on emotional relevance over visual validation. Music, especially in the Indian context, carries memory, identity, and meaning in a way few other signals can. Our collaboration with Saregama reflects a long-term belief that culture-led design can humanise digital matchmaking, enabling connections that begin with emotional alignment rather than surface-level judgement.”
Sougata De, Chief Technology Officer at flutrr, noted: “As choice has scaled in modern dating, intent has weakened, creating a technical challenge, not just a behavioural one. When discovery relies largely on static profiles and visual signals, systems optimise for speed rather than compatibility.”

