Parineeti
Admits
Of
Being
Heartbroken
When
Parineeti
was
asked
has
she
ever
had
her
heart
broken,
she
told,
"Yes,
I
have.
I
have
gone
through
a
heartbreak
and
that
really
helped
me
understand
the
lyrics."
Parineeti
Went
Emotional
During
The
Shoot
"I
was
emotional
during
the
shoot
of
the
video
as
well
as
during
the
singing
of
the
song
because
it
resonates
when
you've
gone
through
pain
or
any
kind
of
lows
in
life.
Even
professionally,
I
have
been
through
a
low,
it
reminds
you
of
all
those
times
and
brings
in
a
lump
in
your
throat.
It
was
hard
for
me,
but
it
has
made
me
a
stronger
person
today," added
Parineeti.
Parineeti
Takes
A
Sly
Dig
At
Alia
&
Shraddha
When
Parineeti
was
asked,
how
differently
she
wanted
to
sing
from
Alia
&
Shraddha,
she
said,
"I
swear
I
didn't
even
think
of
all
these
things.
I
am
so
obsessed
with
music
in
life.
When
I
was
at
that
recording
studio
behind
that
mic,
I
was
just
thinking
about
me
singing.
And
I
just
wanted
to
sing
as
technically
sound
as
it
could
be."
Pari
Hints
At
Alia-Shraddha's
Voice
Being
Auto
tuned
"I
didn't
want
any
auto
tune.
What
you
hear
in
the
song
is
my
take.
Nothing
has
been
‘fixed'.
And
I'm
proud
of
the
fact
that
it
wasn't
required
because
I
have
learnt
music.
Using
auto
tune
would
have
been
a
slap
on
my
music
education."
Pari's
On
Her
Fondest
Memory
Of
Audio
Cassettes
"I
do
have
a
lot
of
them.
We
used
to
have
mixtapes
-
Side
A
and
Side
B.
It
used
to
get
atkaoed
and
we
used
to
put
it
back
with
a
pencil.
If
it
broke,
you
didn't
have
the
luxury
to
go
online
and
download
it
back
then."
We
Gotta
Admit,
We
All
have
Done
This..
She
further
added,
"You
can't
play
it
on
repeat
-
you
needed
to
stop
it,
play
it,
rewind
it,
and
then
wait
because
you
rewind
too
much
or
too
less.
Those
fun
things
-
I
don't
think
our
kids
will
ever
know
them."
Parineeti:
I
Never
Had
A
Walkman
"I
never
had
a
Walkman.
We
couldn't
afford
it.
But
we
used
to
have
one
double-deck
recorder
with
two
speakers.
I
still
have
a
lot
of
those
cassettes
lying
in
my
Ambala
house.
They
are
all
there,"
revealed
Parineeti,
while
talking
about
good
old
days.