100 Best Hindi Songs Today

– Khel Khel Mein (1975) A sweet, upbeat track about falling in love at first sight.

“This was my father’s list,” Arjun said. “He was a radio operator in a small town. No streaming, no cassettes even. Just a Philips valve radio that hummed for five minutes before any voice came through. Every Sunday, he’d write down a song he heard. Took him three years to collect a hundred.”

This guide is categorized by and Genre to help you navigate through the Golden Age to the Modern Era.

( Bhediya , 2022) – Arijit Singh's massive, viral contemporary profession of surrender to love.

: Salil Chowdhury used an uplifting trumpet arrangement to frame Mukesh's philosophical reflections on the fleeting nature of human life. 100 best hindi songs

( Mughal-e-Azam ) – The anthem of defiant love.

– Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995) A song about the surrender of love.

: Toshi Sabri introduced a dark, brooding rock-inflected Sufi style that dominated the horror-romance genre of the late 2000s.

: Hariharan and Kavita Krishnamurthy navigate a towering, swell-and-release ocean of synthesizers, flutes, and percussion in this epic tale of forbidden love. – Khel Khel Mein (1975) A sweet, upbeat

– Aradhana (1969) Sensuality redefined. A song that needs no instruments to feel the rhythm.

: A profound duet by Kishore Kumar and Lata Mangeshkar, featuring Gulzar’s conversational poetry about unresolved love and political estrangement.

Arijit Singh’s blockbuster romantic hit. Mauja Hi Mauja (Jab We Met, 2007): High-energy dance track.

( Chaudhvin Ka Chand , 1960) – Mohammed Rafi's unmatched romantic ode. No streaming, no cassettes even

: Pritam combined the structural framework of a Sufi longing track with western acoustic guitars, allowing Arijit Singh to deliver his most definitive anthem of unrequited love.

– Aashiqui 2 (2013) The song that revived the trend of tragic, intense romance in the 2010s.

Further down: “Tum Hi Ho” – underlined. “The year your father died,” Arjun said quietly. “2013. Cancer. He was forty-two. We played this at his funeral. Not because he liked it, but because it was the last song he heard before the coma. The nurse had left the radio on. I like to think he left the world hearing something beautiful.”

: Kishore Kumar’s smooth, resonant delivery made this Kalyanji-Anandji composition one of the most dedicated love letters in pop culture.

– Agent Vinod (2012) Melodious and haunting.