Rahat sacrifices some of the raw, crackling energy of traditional Qawwali for melodic clarity. This makes his version more "listenable" for a pop audience while retaining the spiritual spine. He adds modern chord progressions without losing the raga base (typically Bhairavi or Yaman Kalyan).

, carries forward a 600-year-old family tradition of qawwali.

In the realm of Sufi music, few names command as much reverence as Rahat Fateh Ali Khan. The heir to the Qawwali throne of the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Rahat has a unique ability to bridge the celestial with the earthly. Among his vast discography of devotionals, one track that has sparked immense curiosity, devotion, and viral traction is

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