Rahat Fateh Ali Khan - Zaroori Tha Apr 2026
In most breakup songs, the narrative is simple: "You hurt me; you were wrong." But Zaroori Tha flips the script. The protagonist admits that the separation, the silence, and even the cruelty were necessary.
Listeners began using the song for "sad reels," for late-night drives, and for the specific type of crying that happens when you are finally ready to let go. It became the anthem for "situationships" and long-dead marriages alike because it speaks to a universal truth: Sometimes, destruction is a prerequisite for construction. Zaroori Tha is not a song you listen to when you are happy. It is a song you listen to when you are healing. It validates the pain by giving it a purpose. Rahat Fateh Ali Khan - Zaroori Tha
Released a few years ago, the track has transcended the label of a "song" to become a cultural touchstone for heartbreak. In a digital age where music is often consumed as background noise, Zaroori Tha forces a pause. It is not just sung; it is felt. It is the sonic equivalent of a deep, resigned sigh—the moment you finally accept that the person who broke your heart was, perhaps, necessary for your growth. Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, the nephew of the legendary Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, carries a massive legacy on his shoulders. While his uncle was the master of ecstatic spiritual surrender (Qawwali), Rahat has carved a niche as the maestro of mournful longing . In most breakup songs, the narrative is simple:
There are songs that make you tap your feet, and then there are songs that stop you mid-step, forcing you to stare at a wall for ten minutes. Rahat Fateh Ali Khan’s Zaroori Tha belongs to the latter, rarest category. It became the anthem for "situationships" and long-dead


