Updated On: 18 August, 2025 06:46 AM IST | Mumbai | Mohar Basu
Singer Aishwarya Majmudar decodes how her single ‘Nazaara’ depicts the bride taking the lead on her wedding and challenges traditional rituals

Aishwarya Majmudar in the music video of ‘Nazaara’
Forget the coy glances and the tradition of not seeing the groom until reaching the mandap. Singer Aishwarya Majmudar’s latest single, Nazaara — The Shaadi, subverts the customs and rituals of a traditional Indian wedding. Her playful number tells the story of a bride who shows up at the groom’s doorstep before the wedding, demanding a peek at him before the rituals begin.
“It’s a playful way of smashing the patriarchy,” the singer tells us with a laugh, before adding, “Brides today have inspired me to flip the script. Earlier, brides used to be shy and submissive. The way women have taken on patriarchal rituals and taken charge of their lives has inspired me to make this song.”
For Majmudar, Nazaara — which she created with Harpreet ‘Nikku’ — reflects the change in the power dynamics of love itself. “I made this song with a bunch of friends. I feel it’s the new-age bride’s entry song. It’s a tradition that the bride and groom can’t see each other, but in this song we break that thought,” she asserts.