By Staff
Listen. I had plans. I had a whole evening mapped out — dinner, some mindless scrolling, maybe an early night for once. Then Tera Ho Gaya started playing and suddenly I’m just dramatically staring at the ceiling like I’m the lead in my own Hum TV drama.
Azaan Sami Khan wrote this, composed it, AND produced it himself. One man. All of this devastation. No accomplices. The audacity.
The acoustic guitar comes in first — gentle, innocent-looking — and you think, okay, I’m safe. Then the violin arrives. Then the piano. And before you know it, you’re emotionally compromised and texting your ex’s contact name in your phone that you renamed “DO NOT OPEN.” This is not music. This is a trap.
His vocals are soft and breathy throughout — the kind of voice that makes you feel like he’s singing specifically about your life situation, even if your life situation is just being annoyed at load-shedding. Somehow it still applies.
The music video features Hina Afridi, who is frankly too beautiful to be allowed in a music video this emotionally dangerous. There are wedding scenes, action sequences, fire, smoke, and what appears to be a man willing to fight everyone in Pakistan for love. Relatable, honestly.
Azaan is the son of Adnan Sami and Zeba Bakhtiar — meaning good genes, good music, and absolutely zero excuse for the rest of us who can’t even hum in tune.
5 out of 5. I’m fine. Everything is fine. Please send biscuits.















What do you think?