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Narasimha (Sanskrit: नरसिंह, lit. 'man-lion', IAST: Narasiṃha), is the fourth avatara of the Hindu god Vishnu in the Satya Yuga. [2] He incarnated as a part-lion, part-man and killed Hiranyakashipu, ended religious persecution and calamity on earth, and restored dharma.
Narasinha Avatar (The Incarnation of Narsinha) is a 1949 Hindi mythological film produced and directed by Sohrab Modi. [1] Made under the Minerva Movietone banner, it had music composed by Vasant Desai with lyrics by Narendra Sharma.
Lourde-Mary Rajeswari (L. R. Eswari) is a veteran playback singer of the Tamil cinema, Telugu cinema, Malayalam cinema and Kannada cinema industries.She also sang in other languages like Hindi, Tulu, and English.
Achutam Keshavam (Hindi: (अचुतम केशवम) (transl. imperishable Lord of creation)), is a popular Hindi bhajan praising Vishnu. [1] [2] It starts with the first verse of Achyutashtakam which wascomposed in Sanskrit by Adi Shankara and continues other verses praising lord Vishnu (not from Achyutashtakam).
After Narasimha disemboweled and killed the asura king Hiranyakashipu, he burned and killed all other asuras and won over them.In the original story of this incident which is true, the asura king Hiranyakashipu and the asura queen Kayudhu's son Prahlada prayed to him along with the devas and devis and celebrated him, after which Narasimha went to Vaikuntha. [5]
Song Film Music Composer Singer(s) Lang; Ābhēri (Carnatic) Bhimpalasi (Hindustani) Maname Ganamum [TH - A Raga's Journey 1] Savitri Papanasam Sivan: M. S. Subbulakshmi: Ābhēri / Bhimpalasi "Bina Madhur Madhur Kachhu Bol" Ram Rajya (1943 film) Shankar Rao Vyas Saraswati Rane: Hindi: Ābhēri / Bhimpalasi "Duniya Se Ji Ghabra Gaya" Laila ...
Swarnalatha (29 April 1973 – 12 September 2010) was an Indian playback singer.She recorded over 10,000 songs in 10 Indian languages including Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada, Hindi, Bengali and other languages.
His songs extol the largest number of shrines – over 40 forms of Vishnu, from Badrinath in North India to Thirukkurungudi in the extreme South. Thirumangai also discusses causes of human suffering and ways to overcome it to achieve salvation. Vedanta Desika praises the work as "a deep insight in spiritual knowledge". [2] [19] [24]