Users can browse files by the first letter of the movie title (e.g., clicking 'D' for Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge or 'Dangal').
Today, while the original website has largely shifted due to copyright changes, the concept of an "A to Z" Hindi video library remains highly relevant for collectors and fans of Bollywood media. The A to Z Organization System
Users clicked on a letter (e.g., 'K' for Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham or 'A' for Aashiqui 2 ) to find specific movie soundtracks.
Metadata matters. A listing that simply gives title and artist is useful for quick retrieval but impoverishes discovery. Imagine an entry for “Tere Bina” that also tags year, film, lyricist, musical scale (raag), and socio-cultural notes — for instance, that it marked a songwriter’s political turn or used an uncommon instrument like the sarod in a pop arrangement. Those tags transform an A-to-Z site into a map where songs connect by theme, era, vocal style, or social function: wedding songs, protest anthems, lullabies, or songs that captured migration narratives. Example: tagging “Chaiyya Chaiyya” not only under S for Sukhwinder Singh or A for A.R. Rahman, but also under choreography, multilingualism, and train imagery would expose its cultural reach beyond a single letter.
While you won't find a single website at www.webmusic.com that has every Hindi video song from A to Z, the path to creating your own perfect collection is clearer than ever.
Platforms offered different video resolutions, ranging from low-quality 3GP files for basic mobile phones to AVI and MP4 formats for desktop computers.