I have always wanted to become a musician and a singer.

I have one favourite song, and that's 'Aayat' from 'Bajirao Mastani.'

Apart from work, whatever pending things I have to do, I do it in Murshidabad.

I wanted to be someone who wanted to produce music, and here I am, and I'm happy about it.

Singing for a documentary that benefits the underprivileged remains one of my biggest dreams.

At times, when I reach my saturation point, I go to some random place and throw my phone away.

I like to compose, but only for myself. I write my own lyrics and compose the music around them.

When I joined the music scene, a lot of big-ticket singers were not getting good work... It was a lean phase.

I still don't have a car. I still travel by public transport. I take autos to travel to and fro for recordings.

Reality shows give a great platform to young singers, but kids shouldn't be exposed to showbiz at a very young age.

In reality shows, you have to perform once and prove yourself, and after that, it is a process to prove yourself every day.

I'm bad in front of the camera. However, if someone gave me a small role in a film with two dialogues and one scene, I'd do it.

I like to read Bengali novels and short stories. I am not that fond of reading English books, as I don't have a connect with it.

My grandma's into music. My mom is a singer. Even my sister is a much better singer than I am. So you could say music runs in the family.

When I'm not singing, I'm a lot of persons: I'm a producer. I'm a badminton player. I'm a writer. I'm a movie freak. I'm a documentary maker.

When my voice breaks, it recovers automatically. I don't do anything special to maintain my voice. I have a natural voice and don't have to take care of it.

I am songwriter. I do compose the music of songs that I write in Bengali. But I've never thought of composing for a film. That's a different art altogether.

I've done a couple of songs which are not up to the mark. So, mentally, I've set a goal that I should be more dynamic and try and push myself as much as I can.

I've always tried to avoid electronic music in India because whatever songs I got in the genre I didn't really enjoy singing them - I didn't like the arrangements.

I have always liked to live my life in a quiet and peaceful manner. I used to lead my life that way. But the rise in social media has certainly affected me. Now I am always noticed.

I've been singing one kind of genre for a long time but have always tried to push to new auras about picking new songs or the same kind of genre but trying to sing it differently, treating it differently.

I am a simple man who comes from a village, and villagers like us speak our mind. Now, in the process, if unknowingly my words came across as disrespectful or insulting, then I am deeply sorry. I don't want to hurt anyone.

More people are asking me to come and sing for them, so obviously I am getting more work. But apart from singing, I have been parallely programming and producing music tracks and assisting music directors. That is my bread and butter, which is how I survived in Mumbai. Now I can't leave it.

If someone is trying to skip the struggle - which is the creative job - our machines today, the technology that we have, can help the person, but it is only momentary. On the other hand, if you are creative, you have the skill, and you are hardworking, technology can only make you superior.

I would not understand when people will tell me that 'Tum hi ho' has got more than 1 million views on YouTube. I was like, 'How does it make a difference?' Later, I would go to YouTube and see songs of Rihanna, Enrique etc. and would see their hits. Then I came to know the importance. Nowadays, you can judge from these sites how big is a sing.

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