Taking the 'Mirchi Jalsaghar' turf, the film's lead pair said while retaining references of the bigger masala blockbuster, the Bengali Khiladi was more than a comedy flick.
"It talks about human emotions, sentiments, cross-religion love. It talks about respecting each other's customs and how all roads lead to one. And it is again a masala flick with dollops of comedy and romance thrown in," Ankush said at the concert of the FM major, held in the run-up to the pujas,
From films to music, popular Bangla band Cactus belted catchy numbers of their upcoming band Blah Blah Blah which advocated against dynasty, rooted for democracy and shunned war mongering, a recurring feature in all Cactus albums.
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"There are numbers like 'Raja Tor Topar Kothay' which are universal for any country, crossing boundaries," he said.
Belting out the chart topping Hemlock Society number 'Gobhire Jao', popular singer Rupankar reminisced how the term Jalsaghar brought back memories of a 'jalsa' in a zamindari household as the show would go on on every puja days till Dashami.
"We want to present a mix of contemporary, traditional yet global music to the Bengalis. From Rupankar, Shilajit and Cactus to an internationally known percussionist like Bickram Ghosh everybody will be there to showcase Bengal's rich diversity of culture and music," a Mirchi spokesman said.
The 3-day fete will end on September 29.