Vasu Raina Makes His Major Label Debut with “Farebi” on Warner Music India — A Cinematic Sequel to His Role in “Maharani”
Vasu Raina’s first major label release with Warner Music, “Farebi,” is a tender, tongue-in-cheek meditation on love, vulnerability, and the beautiful mess in between. It’s a tribute to that one unforgettable presence — the kind that drifts into your life unannounced, leaves chaos in their wake, and yet somehow, you’re grateful for the ache. With honesty at its core and just the right dose of drama, Farebi blurs the lines between heartbreak and humour, confrontation and confession.
There’s no bitterness here — only a quiet acceptance that in love, even deception can be disarming. Maybe we all have a farebi. Maybe we’ve been one too. The “Farebi” music video is a bold, oddly tender continuation of the visual world audiences first saw in Maharani, where Vasu Raina appeared as the lead protagonist. While he had no musical involvement in the original track, his unforgettable on-screen presence left an impression; and Farebi picks up the story from exactly where that moment ended.
Set in a chaotic hospital where things unravel in the most unexpected ways, the video opens with a mistaken delivery that swaps a human heart for a tiffin full of samosas. What follows is a surreal, high-energy spiral — part satire, part spectacle — that turns heartbreak into something bizarrely celebratory.
*Vasu Raina said on the track,*_“‘Farebi’ came from a quiet, passing thought — a gentle check-in with the heart that grew into something playful, theatrical, and deeply human. From the quirky idea of a samosa-filled heart to its raw, conversational lyrics, I wanted it to carry heartbreak with a wink. Working with Warner Music India allowed me to stay true to that voice, blending drama, absurdity, and honesty into something that’s both personal and a little bit mad.”_
With returning appearances by Karun and Lambo Drive — who also featured in Maharani — this sequel extends not just the storyline, but also a very real friendship between the three artists. That shared camaraderie and creative trust forms the core of a concept this playful, layered, and bold.
Directed by the razor-sharp team at Khopcha Films, the Farebi video is proof of what’s possible when young, driven creators come together with vision, humour, and heart. In a time where the next wave of music is as much about the story as the sound, this is the kind of art that feels as fresh as it does important.
