💍 Wedding entertainment
Sangeet, Reception & Baraat Entertainment
A South Asian wedding isn’t one event — it’s four or five very different ones stitched across a week, and each function wants a different sound. Mehndi wants acoustic and intimate. Sangeet wants a high-energy DJ + dhol + featured live singer. Baraat needs a roaming dhol player and a small backing band. Reception flips between cocktail-hour live band and peak-hour dance-floor DJ. We book Punjabi vocalists, Bollywood live bands, wedding singers, dhol players, bilingual emcees, and DJs as standalone hires or bundled into one multi-day package — one contract, one contact, one onsite team that already knows your run-of-show.
Wedding entertainment FAQs
Which wedding functions do you typically cover?▼
All of them — and they all want different things. Sangeet wants high-energy Punjabi / Bollywood dance music (DJ + dhol, often + live singer feature). Mehndi is acoustic / intimate (live singer + harmonium, sometimes light tabla). Baraat needs a live dhol player and a small backing band for the procession. Reception is mixed-format: cocktail-hour live band, peak-hour DJ. We can book any of these standalone or bundle a full multi-day entertainment package.
Do you book Punjabi singers, Bollywood live bands, or both?▼
Both, plus English / bilingual / Hindi options. The most common booking is a Punjabi-vocalist-led group that can play across genres — original Punjabi songs (modern + classic), Bollywood crowd-pleasers, English crossover pieces, and bhajan / shabad for early-day functions. If you want a dedicated Bollywood live band or an English wedding singer for a specific function, we can book those separately.
How does pricing typically work?▼
Drivers are: singer profile (regional Punjabi star vs. local working pro), band size (solo + tracks vs. 6-piece live band), set length, number of functions, travel / hotel needs, and whether you also need DJ + dhol + emcee bundled. The budget tiers in the form are a rough guide — tell us functions and singer style preference and we'll quote a concrete number.
How early should I lock entertainment?▼
Peak South Asian wedding season (May–October), and Diwali / NYE / Vaisakhi weekends, top-tier Punjabi singers and Bollywood bands book 6–10 months out — sometimes 12 months for in-demand names. Off-season is more flexible: 8–12 weeks works for most acts.
Can I bundle everything — singer, DJ, dhol, emcee — in one booking?▼
Yes, and most couples find that's the cleanest way to do it. One contract, one contact, one onsite advancing crew that knows your run-of-show across functions, and pricing that's usually better than booking each piece à la carte through different agencies.