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Krishnan Nair Shantakumari Chithra (born 27 July 1963), credited as K. S. Chithra, is an Indian playback singer and Carnatic musician. In a career spanning over four decades, she has recorded 25,000 songs [1] in various Indian languages including Malayalam, Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, Hindi, Odia, [2] [3] Bengali, Marathi, Punjabi, Gujarati, Tulu, Rajasthani, Urdu, Sanskrit, and Badaga as well as ...
K. S. Chithra was introduced to Hindi film music in 1985; she recorded her first Hindi song composed by S. P. Venkitesh, which was not commercially released. For the 1991 Hindi film Love , composers Anand–Milind , called upon her to sing duets song along with S. P. Balasubrahmanyam and since then, Chithra has recorded for around 200 Bollywood ...
Chithra performing with S. P. Balasubrahmanyam. Chithra's first Telugu song was "Paadalenu Pallavaina" from the dubbed version of Tamil film Sindhu Bhairavi (1985) composed by Ilaiyaraaja, later sang a humming in a song sung by K. J. Yesudas composed by K. V. Mahadevan for the picture Pralayam (1985).
Pages in category "Lists of songs recorded by K. S. Chithra" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Her song "Kannalane/Kehna Hi Kya" from the film Bombay (1995) was included in United Kingdom The Guardian 's "1000 Songs Everyone Must Hear Before You Die" list. [24] She is conferred with the highest honour of Rotary International , For the Sake of Honour Award in 2001 [ 25 ] and has received the MTV Video Music Award – International Viewer ...
Song Composer(s) Writer(s) Co-singer(s) 1996 Just Mohabbat "Just Mohabbat" Raju Singh: 1998 Hip Hip Hurray "Hip Hip Hurray" Louis Banks: Vinay Pathak Hema Sardesai: 1999 Sansaar: Shantanu Moitra: Amitabh Verma: Antara Chowdhury: 2001 Shaka Laka Boom Boom "Shakalaka" 2002 Annamalai (Tamil) "Uyirgal Pirandhadhu" Dhina: Vairamuthu: K. S. Chithra ...
"Gopikamma" is an Indian Telugu-language song by singer K. S. Chithra and composed by Mickey J. Meyer from the 2014 soundtrack album of the film Mukunda. The song is written by Sirivennela Seetharama Sastry. [1]
With six wins in three distinct languages, K. S. Chithra is the most awarded recipient in this category. Shreya Ghoshal has won the award five times in five distinct languages. She is the only recipient to be honoured for two renditions from two different films of different languages in a same year.