Gen-Z Lyrics brings you Queen KMJ Lyrics from the album Tears & Punchlines, performed by MC Insane. The concept for this Translation track originated with MC Insane, who went on to craft it into a impactful masterpiece. The song came to life through MC Insane aka Prakash Sharma, the producer behind it.
Queen KMJ Lyrics
pucho naa kaun hai wo
wo hai karodon mein ek
mere liye de degi jaan
kehti wo maang ke to dekh
maine use hurt kara bahut
koi ladki nahin sahati hai itna
kehti hai pyaar usko utna hi
mere mein gussa hai jitna
wo meri duniya hai
wo meri duniya hai
wo meri duniya hai
wo meri duniya hai
wo meri duniya hai
wo meri duniya hai
wo meri duniya hai
wo meri, wo meri
le-le baahon mein to pyaar se sula de mujhko
wo pagli aati to kya hota dard bhula de mujhko
wo dekhe aankhon se par mind mein nacha de disco
wo mujhko pyaar deti aur main bas rulaata usko
wo sehti sab aur kehti kam hota regreat mujhe
main karta sab khud se barbaad aur kehta fake tujhe
main aisa paapi usse maafi bhi nahin maang sakta
wo kehti nahin hai dil ki baaten par us din wo kehti
khud ke gam mein kehti hoon
main to ghut ke khud mein hi rahti hoon
mere ghar se bhi baat meri hoti nahin
ek aap yu mere mujhe chhod ke na jaao na
chhodne ki baat karo mujhko sataao kuch karo na
jaan apne paas to bulaao
main aa nahin sakti par aap to aao
berang meri zindagi rang le aao
dekhe aise wo ghaayal karte nain uske
karte video call dono rahte long distance pe
jhagde honge saaf aur khud se zyaada trust hai uspe
wo aisi anokhi saal rahti mere andar ghus ke
kehti ghar aao
papa se maango mera haath
mere saath karo shaadi
yu na mujhe aise tadpaao
pavitra rishta ye lagaaoonga sindoor
haan teri maangon mein bharunga sindoor
din wo door nahin jab lagaaoonga sindoor
sindoor baby aa
o baby i love you
mujhe pata hai you love me too
itna pyaar to main khud se nahin karta
jitna mujhe karti tu
mujhe sahi wala raasta dikhaye wo
khata nahin tha khud se nashta khilaye wo
10-20 baat meri sun leti hai
lekin sahi se baat karna mujhe sikhaye
wo duniya hai
wo meri taakat
bahut ki hai paap aur wo bas akeli meri punya hai
dekhta hoon usko tu gussa gaayab
kab jaake banoonga main uske laayak
wo mujhe leke itna plan kar chuki hai
jaise maa karti hai wo bhi same kar chuki hai mujhse pyaar
i believe mujhe ho raha hai phir se pyaar
i believe mujhe ho raha hai phir se pyaar
i believe, i believe, i believe
sach mein tu hai meri kmj saalon baad mili mujhe dm mein
phone number mera maangi wo phir call karti tu am mein
meri harkaton se main waaqif hoon maine dilaya tujhe kaafi dukh
tu kaise karti hai sab tolerate
kaise tu kehti ki main kaafi hoon
main paapi hoon haan, main paapi hoon
khushiyon ka tera mein gala ghota
phir bhi tu itna hai sahati mujhko
main paapi hoon haan, main paapi hoon
khushiyon ka tera mein gala ghota
phir bhi wo mujhse kehti
pucho naa kaun hai tu
tu hai karodon mein ek
tere liye de dungi jaan
bas tu maang ke to dekh
tune mujhe hurt kiya nahin
tere liye sah loongi itna
yaad rakh pyaar mujh mein utna hi
tere mein gussa hai jitna
tu meri duniya hai
tu meri duniya hai
tu meri duniya hai
tu meri duniya hai
tu meri duniya hai
tu meri duniya hai
tu meri duniya hai
tu meri, tu meri
written by: MC Insane
“Queen KMJ” Song Meaning Explained
The Big Picture
So, you know the song is called “Queen KMJ,” right? And on the surface, it sounds like a dedication, a royal title for someone. But the whole song, it’s not just a crown he’s putting on her head… it’s a confession booth. The title frames her as this almost mythical, once-in-a-lifetime figure (“karodon mein ek”), but the story he tells is about how he’s the fool in the queen’s court. He’s the one who doesn’t deserve the throne she’s offering him. It sets up this painful, beautiful tension between worship and self-loathing, between seeing someone as your entire world and knowing you’re kinda poisoning that world just by being in it. The “queen” isn’t just loved, she’s a mirror, and he hates what he sees reflected back.
Most Impactful Lines
Okay, the lines that just… they stop me every time. First, this brutal admission: “main karta sab khud se barbaad aur kehta fake tujhe”. I mean, just sit with that. He’s wrecking everything himself, he’s the architect of his own ruin, and then he has the audacity to call her fake. It’s that ugly, defensive thing we do when we know we’re wrong but can’t face it, so we lash out at the person who sees us most clearly. It’s so painfully honest it makes you wince.
And then, her voice cutting through. “jaan apne paas to bulaao / main aa nahin sakti par aap to aao.” God, this wrecks me. She’s trapped, maybe by distance, by circumstance, by his own nonsense, but her plea is so simple. “Call me closer to you. I can’t come, but you… you come.” It’s this raw, one-sided reaching out. She’s doing all the emotional labor, keeping the door open even when she can’t walk through it. That’s the heartache of the whole song right there.
Decoding The Chorus
We all chant “wo meri duniya hai” by the end, it’s an anthem. But you gotta start at the top. “pucho naa kaun hai wo” – it’s a defensive command. “Don’t even ask who she is,” because her value is so self-evident to him, or maybe because he can’t even articulate it without feeling small.
“wo hai karodon mein ek” sets her on a pedestal, one in millions. Then the twist: “mere liye de degi jaan”. This isn’t just “she loves me.” It’s a level of sacrificial devotion that immediately feels heavy, you know? Like, that’s a lot of pressure. And she challenges him with it: “kehti wo maang ke to dekh.” “Just ask and see.” It’s a test of his faith in her love, and maybe his own worthiness.
The real killer punch in the chorus is the last two lines. He admits he’s hurt her a lot, that no girl would tolerate this much. And then her response: “kehti hai pyaar usko utna hi / mere mein gussa hai jitna.” That’s the whole equation. Her love isn’t *despite* his anger, it’s equal to it. The negative space of his rage is perfectly matched by the positive force of her love. It’s not that she ignores the bad, she meets it head on with an equal measure of good. That’s what makes her the queen. And then the repetition of “wo meri duniya hai” becomes this desperate mantra, him trying to convince himself of this reality he’s constantly undermining.
Most Relatable Part
For me, it’s that gutting refrain he keeps coming back to: “main paapi hoon.” “I am a sinner.” It’s not just “I made mistakes.” It’s a core identity. And then right after, the bewildered, grateful agony of: “kaise tu kehti ki main kaafi hoon?” “How can you say that I am enough?”
That’s the most human thing in the world, I think. The feeling of being fundamentally flawed, a project that’s gone off the rails, and having someone look at your mess and not just accept it, but call it “enough.” It’s not that they don’t see the cracks, they just… choose to love the whole broken vase anyway. We’ve all felt like the paapi, the one who takes more than they give. And the miracle, the thing we can barely believe, is when someone stays. When they see the guilt, the “gala ghota” (drowning their happiness), and they don’t leave. That part makes my breath catch, every single time, because it speaks to the forgiveness we want but feel we don’t deserve.
Conclusion & Overall Message
So what’s it all leaving us with… it’s not a simple love song. It’s a song about being found in your lostness. The overall message, to me, is that real, seismic love isn’t about being perfect for someone. It’s about someone becoming your world while you’re actively screwing things up, and their love being this stubborn, grounding force that doesn’t let you float away into your own self-destruction.
The magic trick of the song is the mirrored second chorus, where the “wo” (she) becomes “tu” (you) and the pronouns flip. It’s him finally speaking her words back to her, fully internalizing her devotion. “Tu meri duniya hai.” He’s not just stating a fact about her anymore, he’s making a vow to her. The journey is from seeing her love as an external, baffling phenomenon to finally accepting it as the core truth of his own life. It ends with that repeated, almost breathless “I believe.” It’s shaky. It’s a work in progress. But after all the regret and self-hatred, it’s a fragile step toward faith. Faith in her, and maybe, just maybe, a little faith in himself because she sees something worth believing in. Honestly, it hits different because it’s not about winning in love. It’s about being redeemed by it, slowly, messily, and completely against the odds.
Queen KMJ Song Video
Queen KMJ Song Credits
| Song | Queen KMJ |
| Artist(s) | MC Insane |
| Album | Tears & Punchlines [EP] |
| Writer(s) | MC Insane |
| Producer(s) | MC Insane aka Prakash Sharma |


