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Performances by Hanumankind, Shahzad Ali, Kings United, Jasmine Sandlas and Madhubanti Bagchi kept the evening buzzing.
The Dhurandhar album launch, an event by Amazon Music, unfolded last evening, on December 1, and it played out exactly as intended — as a full-blown fan event. The sun hadn’t even dipped by late afternoon and yet a small sea of fans had already gathered outside the venue. Families arrived with kids on shoulders, teenagers clutched handmade placards, and security lines rippled with impatience. Tight perimeter checks created a sense of safety, but inside, the crowd had a mind of its own—pushy, chaotic and hungry for proximity.
When the gates opened, the space filled fast. Thousands pressed forward, chanting “DHU- RAN-DHAR” in rhythm. Cutouts of Ranveer Singh’s face bobbed through the crowd, waves of flashing phone cameras coated the space.

The music pulled the crowd in even tighter. Shahzad Ali began with ‘Ishq Jalakar-Karvaan’, and the energy changed. Kings United arrived for 'Easy', and Singh couldn’t resist. He joined them on stage, dancing with them, laughing at himself, and eventually letting the boys toss him into the air because the audience demanded it. Then came ‘Shararat’, with Jasmine Sandlas and Madhubanti Bagchi easing the mood. Sandlas threw in a small, playful dance that sent the front rows into loud cheers. To close, Hanumankind returned with Sandlas for the title track, and the crowd went crazy all over again.
Singh sounded both proud and a little emotional. “It is a very eclectic mix of music. Something for everybody,” he said, before paying tribute to composer Sashwat Sachdev. He called Sachdev a precious soul, someone deeply connected to something beyond himself. “Music serves as the memory of a film,” he added, insisting that Dhurandhar would live in people long after the theatre lights fade.

Between performances, the crowd kept surging. Singh stepped off the stage twice, swallowed by fans reaching to touch him. One fan summed up their experience with a smile, “It was chaotic. I could barely see anything. But it was loud, filmy, messy. And that is exactly why I loved it.”