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Pink Poppy Flowers

SMG (Sardari Music Gang)

  • Writer: harsh thakur
    harsh thakur
  • Jun 23, 2025
  • 2 min read

Updated: Dec 27, 2025

If you ever wondered what happens when you mix unapologetic Punjabi attitude, new-age Hip-Hop, and global ambition, meet SMG, short for Sardari Music Gang — a Mumbai-born music trio now operating across time zones and accents from Australia and the UK.


Three Blokes, Two Continents, One Mission , To Make Punjabi Hip-Hop Unmissable


Comprising three firecrackers Big Kay, Baggh-E, and Farmaan. This isn't your typical "three friends who made a group in college" story. No, these guys have been obsessed with music since their early school days, probably the kind of students who were drumming on the desk while the teacher called their parents.

Each member brings his own flavor to the mix:

  • Big Kay? Think of him as the lyrical sniper. Calm on the outside, but he’ll roast you in four bars without even blinking.

  • Baggh-E (yes, that’s with a double G and a capital E, don’t mess it up) is the wild card. Half poet, half chaos engine, with the energy of a Red Bull on Dhol beats.

  • And Farmaan? He’s the melodic thinker. The guy who reads between the beats. Also, probably the one who actually checks the group calendar.

    LMK [OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO] - BAGGH-E SMG x FARMAAN SMG x BIG KAY SMG | NAV DHIMAN

Now, the name Sardari Music Gang might sound like they’re about to drop a bhangra track in a gangster movie, but hold up. What they really do is twist traditional Punjabi swagger into New School Music, a genre they've been quietly building while most of us were still trying to figure out how to rhyme "Patiala" with "Balenciaga."

They blend hardcore Punjabi statements (not just lyrics, statements) with modern Hip-Hop like it’s a pot of maa ke haath ka rajma stirred with Travis Scott beats. The result? Something that’s not just different, but unapologetically their own.

And while they started off in Mumbai, hustling in a scene that doesn’t always know what to do with trilingual rhyme schemes and cultural crossovers. They’ve now expanded their sound across the globe. One’s chilling in Australia, the other’s in the UK, but thanks to late-night Zoom sessions and never-ending WhatsApp voice notes, they’re building something bigger than just music.

You can feel the ambition in every verse. It’s not just about bangers for reels or clout-chasing with viral hooks. SMG’s music hits like a late-night conversation after six cups of chai...............raw, unpredictable, and real.

They're not trying to fit in with industry templates either. While the world’s busy chasing Western trends or recycling Punjabi pop tropes, these three are carving a third lane. Somewhere between a trap beat and a dhol loop, they’re crafting a sound that feels like the diaspora finally found its mic.

So what’s next for SMG? More than likely: global domination, one gritty hook at a time. But also maybe a mixtape titled “From Vada Pav to Fish and Chips”. Just putting it out there.

Whether you're into Hip-Hop, into Punjabi music, or just like artists who give zero fcuks and still sound good doing it. SMG is the gang you didn’t know you needed.

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