Mumbai, July 7 -- There is a specific kind of memory that belongs to an entire generation. It lives in the way your body remembered a step your brain had forgotten. It lives, unmistakably, in the decade between 2010 and 2020, when a handful of artists rewired what popular music in India looked like, sounded like, and most importantly, felt like. It is the story of six people, Honey Singh, Hardy Sandhu, Guru Randhawa, Lauren and Gottlieb who built the infrastructure of a cultural movement: the era of the hook step, the banger, and the beat that refused to let anyone stay seated. Before them, the idea of a "hook step" barely existed in popular culture. Before them, dancing to a song meant knowing the choreography from a film. These five nam...