Born in Montreal of an Indian father and a Danish mother, Ramachandra Borcar has had a truly diverse musical career. After studying music composition and electro-acoustic music at McGill University, he has gone on to create scores for film, television, documentaries, commercials and the theatre.

Under the name Ramasutra, he released his self-produced, critically acclaimed debut album "The East Infection" in 1999 and the follow-up "El Pipo Del Taxi" in 2003. His debut won a Felix Award in 2000 (amongst three nominations including best arranger), two Mimi awards for album of the year and best live show, as well as a Juno nomination for best alternative album. His second release won a Mimi award for best producer.

Apart from his personal project, Ram has scored several films including Camping Sauvage (2004), Familia (2005), the opening sequence of Nicolas Roeg’s Puffball (2006) and the award winning documentaries Bombay Calling and Regular Or Super (2004). The soundtrack for the latter was released on his own label Semprini Records as "Steel and Glass" in 2005. In 2002 he was awarded a Jutras award for his score to Soft Shell Man (J’ai Un Crabe Dans La Tete). His television work includes Web Dreams, Bob Gratton, opening themes for Tout Le Monde En Parle, Casting, Women Warriors, and several television commercials.

Ram’s production work includes not only his personal albums and soundtracks but other artists as well. In 2005 he produced debut albums for the Brazilian funk band Gaia, the indo-jazz outfit Catherine Potter’s "Duniya Project", Bulgarian gypsy band Lubo Alexandrov’s "Kaba Horo" and more recently, "Western Shanghai" by the Montreal tex-mex electro duo Call Me Poupee and a collaboration with Voivod on their latest album "Katorze".

Although Ram rarely does his eclectic DJ sets anymore he’s already toured the globe and played alongside such artists as Kruder and Dorfmeister, Manu Chao, Amon Tobin, David Byrne, Rachid Taha, Stereolab, Kid Loco, Andy Smith, Asian Dub Foundation and The Chemical Brothers to name a few.