Guru Randhawa- Ishq Tera -official Video- Here

Have you watched the official video yet? Tell us in the comments: Which location from the video would you visit first?

Unlike the high-octane, bass-heavy party anthems we usually associate with Guru, Ishq Tera is a slow burner. The video mirrors this perfectly. We see Guru not as the boisterous party boy, but as the sensitive, slightly heartbroken traveler. The cinematography uses the Alps not just as a backdrop, but as a metaphor for the scale of his emotions—vast, beautiful, and slightly cold. Guru Randhawa- Ishq Tera -Official Video-

Guru Randhawa didn't just release a music video; he bottled the feeling of a perfect summer fling that left a permanent mark. If you haven't felt the "Ishq Tera" hangover yet, put your headphones on, turn up the volume, and let the Alps do the rest. Have you watched the official video yet

The color palette is a wash of pastels: lavender fields, azure lakes, and beige autumn coats. It is aesthetically curated to appeal to the "hopeless romantic" who believes love should look like a painting. The hook line of the song is deceptively simple: “Ishq tera, ishq tera, how do you do this to me?” The video mirrors this perfectly

If you haven’t watched the Official Video for Ishq Tera recently, it is time to revisit it. Here is why this track remains the gold standard for modern desi pop romance. The moment you hit play on the official video, you aren't just listening to music; you are booking a vacation. Directed by the visionary Mihir Gulati, the video is shot against the breathtaking, cinematic backdrops of Interlaken, Switzerland .

When Guru sings, “Meri neend uda ke le gayi tu, Chain mera le gayi tu,” (You stole my sleep, you stole my peace), it resonates because it doesn't feel like a complaint. It feels like a confession. He isn't angry; he is amazed. That shift in tone—from heartbreak to celebration of the feeling itself—is what makes the track addictive. Musically, Ishq Tera is a masterclass in restraint. Produced by the talented Intense (Sukh-E), the track strips away the chaotic dhol beats that dominate Bhangra pop.