Sanson Ki Mala Pe was first played by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan during his first visit to India in 1979, when Indian actor and filmmaker Raj Kapoor invited him at the wedding of his son Rishi Kapoor. This is a Qawwali by the legendary Pakistani singer-songwriter Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.
When the song first came out commercially, including in its 1994 master release, the credits listed it as Traditional.
After the master release labeled the piece as Traditional, another commercial release came out on December 21, 1995, and did the sameâÂÂlisting it as âÂÂWritten-By: Traditional.â After early releases credited the composition as âÂÂTraditional,â the ghazal was later published in 1995 in Tufail Hoshiarpuri's poetry collection *Soch Mala*, where âÂÂSanson Ki Mala Pe (Urdu: óçÃÂóÃÂú éààçÃÂç þñ, translit. sÃÂñsoñ kë mÃÂlàpar simrà «Ã± nis-din pë kànÃÂm)â appears as a listed work of Tufail Hoshiarpuri.
But then, in 2001, a commercial release came out and gave Tufail Hoshiarpuri credit for the lyrics. The composition has also been associated with the medieval Bhakti poet Mirabai, largely due to its devotional imagery centered on Krishna-bhakti themes such as RadhaâÂÂKrishna symbolism and spiritual longing.
On 3 November 1983 at the Wallace Lawley Centre in Birmingham, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan delivered a powerful live performance that transformed the poem's reflective verses into an intense Sufi devotional expression, capturing themes of spiritual longing and ecstasy, and the recording of this performance was later released in 2004 by Oriental Star Agencies after his passing, showcasing his distinctive blend of classical poetry and qawwali while introducing the work to a wider international audience and reinforcing its enduring place in South Asian musical traditions.
In 1996, the song was recomposed by NadeemâÂÂShravan for the film Jeet, starring Sunny Deol, Karisma Kapoor, and Salman Khan.
It was also recreated for the 1997 Hindi film Koyla. It was recomposed by Rajesh Roshan, sung by Kavita Krishnamurthy, and picturized on Shah Rukh Khan and Madhuri Dixit.
Later, Michael Winterbottom used the original version of the song as a soundtrack in his 2011 film Trishna, starring Freida Pinto and Riz Ahmed.
In 2020, Rahat Fateh Ali Khan paid homage to his uncle Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan with a cover version of the song, saying, "Sanson Ki Mala [is] a Qawwali very close to my heart, and this time it has been presented as a fusion track, conceptualised by Salman Ahmed. I dedicate the release to my mentor, Ustad Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, and my father, Ustad Farrukh Fateh Ali Khan."
In 2022, Portuguese guitarist Andre Antunes released a metal reinterpretation of the song which became a viral sensation on YouTube. The video, titled "Legendary Pakistani Singer goes Metal," features Antunes playing heavy metal guitar riffs over Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan's original vocal performance. This unlikely fusion of Qawwali and metal has garnered millions of views and introduced the timeless masterpiece to a new generation of listeners, unearthing the classic for a global audience and receiving widespread acclaim for its creativity and power.
In 2023, the song was remade as "Simroon Tera Naam" by Manan Bhardwaj and sung by Sachet Tandon for the T-Series Hindi film Yaariyan 2.