Bombay Ringtones (1995)
All 2 ringtones from the Bombay soundtrack — short MP3 cuts of every song the film sent to the charts. Combined 31,844 downloads across the album.
Every ringtone from Bombay
Music directors
- A. R. Rahman 2
Mood breakdown
- Romantic 2
About the Bombay (1995) soundtrack
Bombay arrived in 1995, deep in the 1990s chapter of Hindi cinema, and its soundtrack threads 2 distinct ringtone-worthy moments. The album is anchored by composer A. R. Rahman, whose arrangements give the record its sonic identity. On the vocals side, the project leans most heavily on Hariharan, who carries 1 of the soundtrack's tracks — a workload that turns this film into a Hariharan showcase as much as a movie soundtrack.
Across the 2-track set, listeners have downloaded these ringtones 31,844 times in total — proof that the songs have lived far beyond the film's theatrical run. The most-downloaded cut from the album is "Tu Hi Re", which alone accounts for 16,512 phone installs. It tends to be the song people remember first when they think of Bombay. Tonally, the album leans romantic, which is the dominant mood across 2 of its tracks — a useful clue if you're picking a ringtone that fits a specific moment of the day.
What makes this soundtrack work as ringtone material is the way each song is built around a recognisable hook in its first few seconds. Hindi film composers writing for a 1990s audience knew that melodies had to do their emotional work fast — radio playlists, item-number television countdowns and Antakshari rounds at family weddings rewarded songs whose chorus could be hummed within a single hearing. Those same compressed, hook-forward arrangements are exactly what makes a song translate cleanly to a thirty-second phone tone. Browse the cards above, preview each one, and pick the cut that fits your phone's role in your day.
If Bombay sits in your personal canon, you'll probably find more than one ringtone here worth keeping. Many listeners use a film's title song as their default ringtone, a romantic duet from the same album as their partner's contact tone, and a faster dance number for their morning alarm. The 2 tracks on this page give you that flexibility from a single soundtrack.
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