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Shankar Mahadevan (3 March 1967) is an Indian playback singer and music composer.Best known for his work in Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam and Marathi films. He has also recorded songs for many non-film albums, teliseries, devotionals and classical.
Below are her mainstream Hindi, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam record lists. She has also released thousands of devotional Hindu albums including Gajanana, Aartiyan, Shri Sai Mantra, Shri Ram Mantra and Jai Ambe Maa to name a few. [1] Her 2015 Sai bhajan "Sai Ram Sai Shyam" has found immense popularity among devotees.
In Newar Buddhism, Ganapati is also a benefactor and a protector deity. [8] In Nepal, the Hindu form of Ganesha, known as Heramba, is popular; he has five heads and rides a lion. [25] Ganapati (Tibetan: tshogs bdag) is retained as a deity in the Indo-Tibetan Buddhist pantheon. He is seen as a destroyer of obstacles, demons, and as a wealth ...
"Vatapi Ganapatim" is a part of the series of hymns called Shodasha Ganapati kritis, a collection of songs dedicated to sixteen Ganesha icons located in shrines around Dikshitar's birthplace Thiruvarur. [1] Vatapi Ganapatim is dedicated to the image of Vatapi Ganapati of Tiruchenkattankudi in Thiruvarur district, in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.
Shri Ganesh Vivah - "Panghat Pe Chali Sawaar Gori" with Suman Kalyanpur "Bhagwan Tune Kya Kiya" with Mohammed Rafi "Mere Bhole Piya" "Aangan Mein Khele Laal" "Jai Vandan Girja Ke Nandan" "Bade Bade Akhiyan, Kamal Jaisu Pakhiyan" "Laal Rang Mein Rangi Dhwaja" with Manna Dey "Ashram Kya Tha, Punyalok Tha" with Manna Dey; Shri Nagad Narayan -
Ganesha as Mayureshwara with consorts Riddhi and Siddhi, Morgaon.Samarth Ramdas composed the arati inspired by Mayureshwara. Sukhakarta Dukhaharta (literally "harbinger of happiness and dispeller of distress", [1] Marathi: सुखकर्ता दु:खहर्ता, sukhakartā duḥkhaharta), also spelled as Sukhkarta Dukhharta, is a popular Marathi arati, song or bhajan (devotional ...
Ganapati (गणपति; gaṇapati), a synonym for Ganesha, is a compound composed of gaṇa, meaning "group", and pati, meaning "ruler" or "lord". [20] Though the earliest mention of the word Ganapati is found in hymn 2.23.1 of the 2nd-millennium BCE Rigveda, it is uncertain that the Vedic term referred specifically to Ganesha.
Many families worship Ganesha in the form of patri (leaves used for worshiping Ganesha or other gods), a picture is drawn on paper or small silver idols. In some households Ganesha idols are hidden, a feature unique to Ganesh Chaturthi in Goa due to a ban on clay Ganesha idols and festivals by the Jesuits as part of the Inquisition. [43]