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Barfi! is the soundtrack album for the 2012 Hindi film of the same name.The music and original score is composed by Pritam and featured lyrics written by Swanand Kirkire, Ashish Pandit, Neelesh Misra and Sayeed Quadri.
Song: Composer(s) Writer(s) Co-artist(s) Shikaar: 34 "Dil Kisi Ka Dil" Anand Raj Anand Dev Kohli Sonu Nigam Shukriya: 35 "Ni Sohniye" Devendra-Yogendra Sameer Anjaan: Alka Yagnik, Udit Narayan, Sonu Nigam Thoda Tum Badlo Thoda Hum: 36 "Aanchal Hai Pawan" Amar Mohile Nida Fazli: Udit Narayan 37 "Kalam Hath Mein Hai" Sonu Nigam 38 "Sabhi Aa Chuke ...
He also lent his voice for Chirantan Bhatt in 1920: Evil Returns and for Vishal–Shekhar in Shanghai, where the song "Duaa" from the latter fetched him Mirchi Music Award for Upcoming Male Playback Singer award and was nominated in the same category for "Phir Le Aya Dil" from Barfi!.
Song Composer(s) Writer(s) Co-singer(s) Ref. Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam "Kaipoche" Ismail Darbar: Mehboob Kotwal: Shankar Mahadevan, Jyotsna Hardikar, Damayanti Bardai [6] "Tadap Tadap" Dominique Cerejo [7] Pyaar Mein Kabhi Kabhi "Koi To Mujhe Bata De" Salim–Sulaiman: Salim Bijnori, Raj Kaushal: Jeanne Michael, Salim Merchant [8] "Lakhon Deewane ...
"Master Sir" (Sinhala: මාස්ටර් සර්) is a Sinhala pop song written by Sri Lankan singer/songwriter Nimal Mendis for the film Kalu Diya Dhahara ("A column of black water"), in which it was performed over the title sequence by Neela Wickramasinghe.
In 1956, she contested for ‘Padya Gayana’ competition held at Borella YMBA, in which she won a gold medal. After winning the poetry contest, Radio Ceylon W. D. Amaradeva invited Nanda to take part in a song, she sang the song Budu Sadu written by Asoka Colombage and set to music by D. D. Danny on Karunaratne Abeysekera's popular program known as Lama Mandapaya on Radio. [6]
This is a list of songs performed, sung and/or recorded by Mohammed Rafi between 1942 and 1980. Over 5,000 of his songs are listed here. Most are in Hindi but he also sang in several other languages. The genre of song is first, followed by any other singers and the music director or lyricist, then album name and year released.
It was a musical film and Basu wanted to have more than 20 songs in the soundtrack, with all tracks being consisted of lip-synced songs. [9] Unlike the album for Barfi! was being finalised at the last minute before the release, the soundtrack was conceptualised during the film's production. [10]