Gen-Z Lyrics brings you Supremacy Lyrics, performed by Shooter Kahlon. The concept for this Punjabi track originated with Shooter Kahlon, who went on to craft it into a impactful masterpiece. The song came to life through Shooter Kahlon, the producer behind it.
Supremacy Lyrics
ho baazi kheddi aa jihdi na kade haari
baddi utte tak laaee di udaari
kare duniya salaam saanu saari
rikaane
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
rikaane
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
ni hunda ae bathera asin
jinne kamshoor
ijjat dikhaave bilo ghat manzoor
saade te depend asin kado kariye
kam ni koi mittran di pahunch kolon dur
bande thode ajj na yaari
wadda saade ton na koi vi shikaari
age halki demand saadi bhaari
rikaane
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
rikaane
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
ho maarnio paindi rabb mehar varsaave
shaukh na rupiya jatt shaukh utte laave
rakh liaa kaaran da craze jihda sohniye
aaye din yaaran kolon kharchae karaave
oh saade ch aa jihdi tu drip labbdi
taur laa ke rakhi di aa sire laggdi
bas poordian rakh ke garari baddi
badi balliye saade ch kalakaari
ik number da gabhru likhaari
rikaane
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
rikaane
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
aini jatt di jatt di sardaari
written by: Shooter Kahlon
” Supremacy” Song Meaning Explained
The Song Title & The Big Picture
Right, so the song is called “Supremacy,” which is kind of perfect, you know? It’s not a subtle title, but it’s not trying to be. It’s a statement. From the jump, Shooter Kahlon is telling you what this whole vibe is about: it’s about claiming your space, your respect, your top spot. But the cool thing is… it’s not about putting others down to get there. The supremacy he’s talking about feels earned, you know? It’s the kind that comes from a lifetime of playing a game you never lose, of carrying a weight that would break other people’s backs. It frames the whole song as this anthem of unshakeable self belief, this quiet, heavy confidence that doesn’t need to scream. It’s not arrogance, really. It’s just… a fact. The title sets that tone, like, “buckle up, we’re talking about what it means to be at the peak, on your own terms.”
Most Impactful Lines
Okay, so the verse has these lines that just… they stop you. “ho baazi kheddi aa jihdi na kade haari / baddi utte tak laaee di udaari”. It translates to playing a game you’ve never lost, carrying a burden on your shoulders that’s like a whole flight of stairs. That metaphor, man. It’s not just about winning, it’s about the weight of always having to win, of carrying that expectation and making it look easy. That’s the core of the struggle right there. The glory and the weight are the same thing.
And then later, there’s this defiant, almost weary line: “bande thode ajj na yaari / wadda saade ton na koi vi shikaari”. “Our friends are few these days, no one’s a bigger hunter than us.” This part always gets me. It speaks to that isolation at the top, how success filters out the real from the fake. You’re the apex, the ultimate “hunter,” so of course you’re alone in that bracket. It hits hard because it mixes pride with a hint of loneliness, which makes the whole boast feel more real, more human.
Decoding The Chorus
Alright, the chorus. We all shout “Rikaane!” and then that massive, rolling line: “aini jatt di jatt di sardaari”. It seems repetitive until you listen to what it’s actually doing. “Aini Jatt di” – “This much of a Jatt’s…” He’s saying it twice for emphasis, like he’s piling it on, building it up. “Sardaari.” That’s the key. It doesn’t just mean “leadership” in a bossy way. It’s heritage, it’s dignity, it’s the crown of your identity and your lineage.
So when you break it down, he’s not just saying “I’m the leader.” He’s saying, “This… *this immense level* of a Jatt’s… this immense Jatt-ness… its *sardaari*.” He’s defining the supremacy. It’s the supremacy of authentic identity, of inherited strength. The repetition is the point, you know? It’s a mantra. It’s him and us, the listeners, affirming it over and over until it becomes the truth of the room. Every time it loops, it feels less like a boast and more like a law of nature.
Most Relatable Part
For me, the most brutally relatable part is this couplet: “ijjat dikhaave bilo ghat manzoor / saade te depend asin kado kariye”. “We show respect even to those who are less worthy / When have we ever depended on anyone to get things done?” Okay, wow. This is the daily grind of integrity, right? It’s about maintaining your character, your *ijjat*, even when you’re dealing with people who don’t deserve that kindness from you. And the second line is that fierce, stubborn independence that so many of us cling to. That pride in being self-made, in being the person others lean on, never the other way around. It’s exhausting and empowering at the same time. It’s the heart of the struggle, the part that isn’t about flashy success, but about the quiet code you live by when nobody’s watching.
Conclusion & Overall Message
So what’s “Supremacy” leaving you with? It’s not a hollow flex. The takeaway for me is this deep sense of earned pride. It’s a summit you built yourself, brick by heavy brick, while playing a game you couldn’t afford to lose. The message is about the weight of that crown, the loneliness that comes with it, but also the unbreakable dignity in how you carry it all. It connects because, on our scale, we all have our own versions of this, right? Our own burdens to carry, our own integrity to uphold, our own small arenas where we refuse to lose. The song makes you feel that struggle and that triumph as something epic. It turns your daily grind into a saga. And that final, repeated chorus… it just embeds that feeling in your bones. You finish listening and you just feel… taller. Solid. Like you’ve been reminded of your own code.
Supremacy Song Video
Supremacy Song Credits
| Song | Supremacy |
| Artist(s) | Shooter Kahlon |
| Album | Supremacy |
| Writer(s) | Shooter Kahlon |
| Producer(s) | Shooter Kahlon |


