Whether I am performing for an elite crowd or a crowd of 20,000 people - the moment someone asks for 'Agneepath,' and I respond 'Agneepath' chahiye?' the noise in the crowd, shows that this song has become huge.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Sometimes when people can't speak English, they hum the melody instead of singing along. Having 20,000 people humming your song is incredible.
I have sung to large crowds since then, and there is a feeling that once you get over 100,000 people, you kind of lose the control element, you don't know if you are really getting through or not.
Crowds respond to anthemic choruses.
It's kind of exhilarating, walking through a crazy, insane mob. The most miraculous process is watching a song go from a tiny idea in the middle of the night to something that 55,000 people are singing back to you.
It's a unique thing to stand in front of a crowd and sing your songs.
The sheer force of the music calls for a wild audience reaction.
I've done a song with almost everybody in the game.
I'm not comfortable singing in front of people yet. That's going to take another 100 performances.
Even if you have a big tune, live crowds can get sick of it. It's not just about the song but also the staying power and if people have connected with it in a certain way. I know that the tracks I put more emotion and depth into are the ones that have the staying power in clubs.
No one worries about genre when they're dancing. They're not asking themselves, 'Is this song a dubstep song?'