Chaar Diwaari x Sonu Nigam’s “Iss Tarah”: How Gen Z Is Quietly Revolutionizing Indian Music The Bridge Chronicle
Entertainment

Chaar Diwaari x Sonu Nigam’s “Iss Tarah”: How Gen Z Is Quietly Revolutionizing Indian Music

Chaar Diwaari and Sonu Nigam team up to create a genre-defying track that unites generations and signals a quiet revolution in Indian music.

Manaswi Panchbhai

If your feed has been buzzing with “Iss Tarah,” there’s a reason, this isn’t just another song. It’s a cultural crossfade, a bridge between generations, and a bold statement about the future of Indian music.

Join our WhatsApp Channel to Stay Updated!

Sonu Nigam, the voice that defined a generation, has teamed up with 22-year-old Garv Taneja, known as Chaar Diwaari — a producer, singer, and visual artist who rose from the internet with self-produced, experimental sounds. Together, they’ve crafted a track that blends decades of legacy with the fearless creativity of Gen Z.

“Iss Tarah” is genre-fluid. It marries Sonu Nigam’s emotive, instantly recognizable vocals with Chaar Diwaari’s modern, experimental production, a mix that feels both nostalgic and completely fresh. For millennials who grew up spellbound by Sonu’s voice, it’s a nod to the music that shaped them. For Gen Z, it’s a demonstration that young artists can produce, innovate, and collaborate on a level previously reserved for legends.

This isn’t just about nostalgia. It’s about showing that indie and mainstream music in India are no longer separate worlds. From Arijit Singh collaborating with 24-year-old self-made singer Ananya Sharma on “Into You,” to 21-year-old GinnieGini being hailed as the “Quietest Revolution in Indian Pop,” the trend is clear: Gen Z artists are self-made, fearless, and reshaping the landscape.

What makes “Iss Tarah” special is how it balances reverence with reinvention. Chaar Diwaari treats a legend not as a competitor but as a feature in his universe. The track feels like a conversation across decades: one that says, “We honor your legacy, and we’re building the future — together.”

Beyond its musical brilliance, the collaboration sends a message. India’s new music isn’t about rejecting the old. It’s about letting younger artists lead, letting them experiment, and letting legends lend emotional weight and wisdom. It’s proof that creative spaces can be shared and that magic happens when they are.

“Iss Tarah” is more than a viral track. It’s a signal: Gen Z isn’t just participating in music, we’re revolutionizing it. We’re blending indie, mainstream, legacy, and experimental sounds to craft a future that’s unapologetically ours. And as long as collaborations like this keep happening, the sound of Indian music is only going to get bolder, fresher, and more alive.

17-7: The statistic unbeaten Punjab Kings must overcome against Sunrisers Hyderabad

Pune’s Summers Are Getting Hotter — But Not the Way You Think

Pune: Helicopter Carrying Chhagan Bhujbal Lands in Parking Area Instead of Helipad in Purandar

NTA Opens Correction Window for GAT-B, BET 2026 Applications Till April 13 at exams.nta.nic.in/gat-bet

Bernabeu whistles at Real Madrid as they draw with Girona, potentially falling out of the title race

SCROLL FOR NEXT