For many Bollywood fans, Awarapan is not just a film. It is a memory attached to a playlist. Long before songs started trending through reels, Toh Phir Aao and Tera Mera Rishta had already become part of India’s heartbreak culture.
Now Awarapan 2 has begun its musical journey with Ve Junoon, a slow emotional track featuring Emraan Hashmi and Disha Patani. The song is composed by Mithoon, written by Sayeed Quadri and sung by a fresh playback voice who has suddenly become the name everyone wants to know.
That voice belongs to a singer whose journey feels almost as moving as the song itself.

Ve Junoon Brings Back The Old Heartbreak Mood
Ve Junoon does not try to become a loud chartbuster. It moves like an old wound.
The visuals show Shivam carrying loneliness, grief and emotional scars. He appears to drown his pain in alcohol while fighting an inner storm that he cannot fully explain.
Awarapan was never only about romance. It was about guilt, loss, sacrifice and the cost of loving someone when life has already damaged you. Ve Junoon continues that mood. It brings back the ache, but also hints that Shivam may not be completely closed to love.
For listeners discovering Subodhh Sharma today, this may look like a sudden breakthrough. But his story is not sudden at all.
He is a Jammu-born musician who grew up around music, poetry and riyaaz. His father, Pt. Prithvi Raj Sharma, is known as a composer and poet. That early environment gave him exposure to melody, lyrics and discipline.
He later moved to Mumbai with a dream many young artists understand. He wanted to build a life in music. But Mumbai rarely gives instant answers. For around 12 years, he worked quietly behind the scenes as a musician, arranger and collaborator.
That detail matters. The audience may be hearing his name now, but he has been close to music for years. He was not new to the craft. He was new to the spotlight.
In India, this story feels familiar. Many people work for years before one moment finally puts their name in public view. The world calls it overnight success, but the person knows how long the night really was.
Even while working behind the scenes, the singer kept sharing music on social media. He posted performances, including songs linked with his father’s compositions. One such video reached producer Vishesh Bhatt and caught his attention.
Earlier, a singer often needed a studio audition, an industry meeting or a strong contact to be heard. Today, a raw Instagram video can become a visiting card. It does not replace hard work, but it can put that hard work in front of someone who matters.
Vishesh Films has a long connection with music-led storytelling. The banner has often backed songs built on pain, longing and youth emotion. But the reel alone did not do the job. The voice had to be ready.
The song works because the singing does not sound over-polished. It has a vulnerable quality that suits Shivam’s emotional state.
Shivam is not a man who explains his feelings easily. He carries pain quietly. He looks like someone who has already loved, lost and paid a heavy price for both.
That is where Mithoon’s composition and the singing meet well. The song gives space for pauses, ache and emotional weight. It does not rush the listener.
The line “Phir Ishq Karne Chalu Kyu” captures Shivam’s conflict clearly. It is the question of someone who knows love can heal, but also knows love can destroy.
Why begin again? Why feel again? Why open a wound that may not have fully closed?

The song is rooted in heartbreak, but it does not only look back. Disha Patani’s solo performance in the video catches Shivam’s attention and suggests the beginning of a new emotional chapter.
The makers have not revealed how their paths intersect, which helps the song create curiosity without giving away too much. Nostalgia can bring the audience back, but a new story must give them a reason to stay.
Soon after the song dropped, fans started reacting with emotion. Some called it beautiful. Others said they had been waiting for this kind of track. Many also connected it with Emraan Hashmi’s long history of memorable Bollywood music.
For many Indian listeners, these songs were part of school bus rides, cyber cafe downloads, Bluetooth sharing, caller tunes and late-night heartbreak sessions.
So Ve Junoon is not being judged like an ordinary new song. It is being compared with memory. Fans are also waiting to see whether the album can give them something close to Toh Phir Aao or Tera Mera Rishta.
This debut of Subodhh Sharma also reminds us of something important about Bollywood music.
The industry is full of people who help build songs before the public ever learns their names. Arrangers, session musicians, producers, sound engineers and background collaborators often shape the sound that listeners finally enjoy.
That is what makes this break meaningful. It is not only about a new singer getting a film song. It is about a behind-the-scenes artist stepping into the spotlight after years of work.
Vishesh Films choosing a relatively fresh public voice also adds to the interest. The banner has a history of songs that outlive the films around them.

The Awarapan sequel brings back Shivam, one of the most remembered intense characters from mid-2000s Bollywood. The new film is directed by Nitin Kakkar and features Disha Patani as the female lead. It is scheduled to release in theatres on August 14, 2026.
At The United Indian, this story stands out because it is not just about a song release. It is about timing, patience and recognition.
In a country where millions of young people are trying to be noticed for their talent, a story like this feels personal. Someone works quietly for years, keeps improving and keeps showing up. Then one day, the right person hears the right voice at the right time.
Ve Junoon works because it brings back a familiar emotional space. It reminds fans why the original film’s music still hurts in the right way. But it also gives the audience a new name to watch.
For now, Subodhh Sharma has done what a debut singer needs to do. He has made people ask who he is. More importantly, he has made them feel something.
Ve Junoon by “Subodhh Sharma” has given the Awarapan sequel a soft but effective start. It carries the pain, longing and old-school heartbreak that fans expected from this franchise.
The song also gives Bollywood listeners a new voice with a real journey behind it. People are not only reacting to the melody. They are reacting to the emotion, the nostalgia and the story of a singer finally stepping forward.
Whether Ve Junoon becomes as iconic as the original film’s songs will take time. But it has already achieved one thing. It has made fans emotional again including the TUI family.
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