Sonu Nigam’s Voice Meets Chaar Diwaari’s World on New Track Iss Tarah
listen to the track here….
Viraasat Banke Hi Rahegi | Term Insurance Plans | 20 Sec | Master
Some collaborations feel planned. Others feel like they were meant to happen. Iss Tarah, the new release by genre-blurring artist Chaar Diwaari, belongs firmly in the second category. Featuring the unmistakable voice of Sonu Nigam, the track brings together two very different musical generations—not as a marketing moment, but as a genuine creative meeting point.
At its core, Iss Tarah isn’t about labels, eras, or even genres. It’s about what happens when artists follow instinct. Chaar Diwaari’s experimental, emotionally raw sound finds an unexpected but deeply natural partner in Sonu Nigam’s melodic sensibility. The result is a song that feels intimate, modern, and quietly powerful.
Coming off the success of Farebi with Raftaar, **Garv—aka Chaar Diwaari—**continues to build his narrative universe with intention. Iss Tarah carries forward the emotional thread introduced in Banda Kaam Ka, capturing a moment of open-hearted vulnerability. The imagery of the moth—drawn to love, even if it burns—adds a poetic layer to a track shaped by hazy synths, immersive textures, and a drifting, late-night kind of mood.

Chaar Diwaari’s raspy, unfiltered vocal delivery moves through psychedelic shades, touches of modern R&B, and pop-driven hooks. Then Sonu Nigam enters—not as a throwback, but as an emotional presence that grounds the song. His verse doesn’t feel nostalgic; it feels instinctive, adding romance and depth in a way that only experience can.
Talking about how the collaboration came together, Chaar Diwaari shares:
“I tried fitting in several voices for that verse, including my own, but nothing felt quite right. When Vishal Dadlani introduced me to Sonu sir, everything clicked. His rendition of Iss Tarah added a depth and emotion I hadn’t imagined, and collaborating with him was both inspiring and a huge learning experience. The song organically brings two musical worlds together in a way that feels honest and contemporary.”
As Chaar Diwaari’s audience continues to grow, Iss Tarah feels like more than just another release. It’s a quiet statement about where Indian music is heading—towards collaborations driven by feeling rather than formulas, where legacy and experimentation don’t compete, but converse.

