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Sai Htee Saing began his music career in 1969, when he aired a Shan language song on the Burma Broadcasting Service. [3] The Wild Ones achieved major success in Burma throughout the 1970s and 1980s, known for composing their own songs in the Burmese language. [1] [4] Sai Htee Saing was also prominent in the Shan literature movement to preserve ...
Sai Hsai Mao (Shan: ၸၢႆးသၢႆမၢဝ်း; 1948 – 17 July 2024), also known as Sai Saing Maw (Burmese: စိုင်းဆိုင်မောဝ်), was a distinguished Burmese singer and musician of Shan descent. [1] Born in Muse, Burma, he was the most prominent singer of Shan pop music, known for his prolific cover songs.
During this period, the arrival of various bands including the influential Thabawa Yinthwenge (The Wild Ones), which included lead singer Sai Htee Saing, an ethnic Shan, in 1973 paved the way for ethnic minority musicians to gain visibility in the Burmese music industry. [11] Sai Kham Leik is a well known composer associated with The Wild Ones.
Yin Htae Ka Sai Htee Saing 3 (1996) Nar Lae Htar Naw နားလည်ထားနော် (1996) Mercury Nya မာကျူရီည (1996) A Thet Shoo Kyat Tal အသက်ရှူကျပ်တယ် (1996) Sayonara ဆာယိုနာရား (1997) Htoo Ein Thin Winyin (1997) Yin Htae Ka Sai Htee Saing 3 (1997)
Sai Sai Kham Leng was born on 10 April 1979 in Taunggyi, Shan state, Myanmar to Kham Leng and Cho Cho San Tun of an ethnic Shan aristocratic family. His great-grandfather Sao San Tun, Saopha of Mongpawn, was a signatory to the 1947 Panglong Agreement and one of nine senior government officials assassinated on 19 July 1947.
Saing may refer to: Chay Saing Yun, Cambodian politician; Sai Htee Saing (1950–2008), Burmese singer-songwriter; Saing Pen (born 1926), Cambodian equestrian;
Sai Kham Leik (Shan: ၸၢႆးၶမ်းလဵၵ်း, Burmese: စိုင်းခမ်းလိတ်), is a successful and prolific Burmese songwriter. Said to be a physician by training he is an ethnic Shan songwriter and has written more than 500 songs in Burmese , 200 in Shan and about 35 in English.
The following is a list of notable deaths in March 2008.. Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence: