Writing Tu Hi Tu was one of those moments where everything just poured out of me. No filters, no overthinking. Just emotions on paper — straight from the heart.
You know those nights where your mind just won’t shut up? Where you keep replaying old conversations, imagining new ones, thinking of what you should’ve said... yeah, one of those.
“Rakh la dil mera, modi na tu mainu
Suni mere avaaz, ave todi na tu mainu”
These lines hit different when you're scared of losing someone who means everything. It's me saying, “Here’s my heart — don’t break it.” We’ve all been there, right?
“Zindagi de vich mere aye bde lok
Tere vrgi na mile koi mainu”
You meet hundreds of people, but there’s always that one who feels different. Like they’re not just a part of your story — they are the story.
This verse wasn’t flex — it was real talk.
“Vadiya gadeya tere layi khdaiya
Londono dressa khas tere lyi mngayeya”
I’ve always believed: if you love someone, you go all in. Show up. Provide. Protect. Love isn’t just saying “I miss you” — it’s “I got you, no matter what.”
“Tuhi tu, bass tuhi tu...”
It sounds simple, but it’s deep. When you give someone that level of importance — where they’re in every breath, every thought — it changes you. That’s what this hook is about. Not obsession. Just... devotion.
“Dekhe java photo nu mai tere sari raat
Na ayi neend na ayi koi baat”
We’ve all scrolled through old photos at 2 AM. That tight chest feeling. Wondering what could’ve been. These lines were written in one of those moments. And it hurt — but I didn’t want to hide that.
“Tuhio hai jine ehe Gill mashoor keta”
This line is personal. My art, my music — it all changed because of her. The muse. The reason. The inspiration. That’s why I had to say it.
Tu Hi Tu isn’t just a track. It’s a chapter of my life I had to let out. If you’ve ever loved someone so deeply that it scared you — this song is for you. If you've ever felt like they're the reward, not the challenge — you’ll get it.
I write songs like I write journal entries — not for the world, but for myself. If the world connects, that’s a bonus. But at its core, Tu Hi Tu is just me, being real about love, heartbreak, and hope.
— Sunveer Gill
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