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The soundtrack to the 1990 Hindi-language romantic musical film Aashiqui features twelve songs composed by Nadeem–Shravan (a duo consisting of Nadeem Saifi and Shravan Rathod) and lyrics written by Sameer, Rani Mallik and Madan Pal. Released by T-Series on 26 December 1989, it became the highest-selling Bollywood soundtrack of all time with around 2 crore units sold.
"Nashe Si Chadh Gayi" (transl. Upon me like intoxication) is a Hindi song sung by Arijit Singh with the French vocals provided by Caralisa Monteiro.The music is composed by Vishal–Shekhar and the lyrics are penned by Jaideep Sahni and the French lyrics penned by Caralisa Monteiro.
I am a Vagabond) is a song from the 1951 Indian film Awaara, directed by and starring Raj Kapoor, which was internationally popular. [1] [2] The song was written in the Hindi-Urdu language [3] by lyricist Shailendra, and sung by Mukesh. [4] "Awaara Hoon" immediately struck "a chord in audiences from various classes and backgrounds all over ...
Download QR code; Print/export ... Pages in category "Songs in Hindi" ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
The soundtrack consists of 14 songs each in Hindi, Tamil and Telugu languages, which also includes the film's background score as well. 99 Songs marked the first Indian soundtrack album to use Dolby Atmos technology. [2] It is Rahman's first Hindi album after his absence to the Bollywood music scene, since Mom (2017), the last Hindi film he ...
The song is sung by Arijit Singh and the Qawwali vocals are provided by Mujtaba Aziz Naza, Shadab Faridi, Altamash Faridi and Farhan Sabri. [1] It is composed by filmmaker and music composer Sanjay Leela Bhansali, and the lyrics are penned by A. M. Turaz with Qawwali lyrics by Nasir Faraaz.
The Times of India's Kasmin Fernandes wrote; "Bhardwaj starts off the song with her restrained yet powerful vocals and the pace picks up when Singh comes on. It is a lounge song that gets a dreamy treatment with the sarangi that is heard throughout". [16] Rajiv Vijayakar from Bollywood Hungama expressed a mixed response to the lyrics of the ...
The opening lines of the song set the theme. The lyricist attempts to understand the strangeness of life. He claims he is upset, but not angry. [3] In the film Masoom, the male version of the song sings and captures a father's helplessness and the female version narrates a woman's pain in dealing with her husband's illegitimate child. [2]