| Track Title | Mood/Context | Why It's Iconic | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Chaos & Introduction | Plays during the opening sequence. Sets the gritty, lawless tone. | | 2. O Womaniya | Folk Seduction | Played during the playful yet dangerous courting scenes. Captures the rustic "item" song vibe without being cheap. | | 3. Ik Bagal | Introspection | A beautifully haunting background score often used during Sardar Khan's quietest moments. | | 4. Bhojpuri Boss | Swag | The rap battle that captures the "gundaraj" (mob rule) vibe perfectly. | | 5. Keh Ke Loonga | Revenge Anthem | The definitive track of the film. It translates to "I will tell you before I kill you"—Sardar Khan's core philosophy. | | 6. Womaniya (Remix) | The Wedding | High energy, chaotic, played during the massive wedding sequences that usually precede a massacre. | | 7. Tahi Tahrir | The End | The classical, heavy track signifying the weight of destiny. |
| Index No. | Scene Title | Key Characters | Synopsis | |-----------|-------------|----------------|----------| | 3.01 | The Coal Loot | Sardar, his gang | Sardar successfully loots a coal train, challenging Ramadhir’s monopoly. | | 3.02 | The Police Trap | Sardar, Ramadhir | Ramadhir uses corrupt police to arrest Sardar’s men. | | 3.03 | The Epic Monologue | Ramadhir Singh | Iconic scene: "Beta, tumse na ho paayega" (Son, you won’t be able to do it). | | 3.04 | Sardar’s Downfall | Sardar, Sultan Qureshi | Sardar is ambushed and killed in a cinema hall. Part 1’s climax. | index of gangs of wasseypur part 1
: Features an ensemble including Manoj Bajpayee, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Huma Qureshi, and Pankaj Tripathi. | Track Title | Mood/Context | Why It's
A neighborhood in Dhanbad, Jharkhand. It serves as the primary battleground and cultural backdrop of the film. O Womaniya | Folk Seduction | Played during