Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Pasoori" (Punjabi: پسوڑی, lit. 'difficulty/trouble', IPA: [pə˨.suː.ɽiː]) [1] [note 1] is a Punjabi and Urdu-language single by Pakistani singers Ali Sethi and debutant Shae Gill. [4] It was released on 6 February 2022 as the sixth song of season 14 (episode two) of Coke Studio Pakistan and was subsequently released on YouTube on 7 ...
Tere Tille Ton (Punjabi: ਤੇਰੇ ਟਿੱਲੇ ਤੋਂ) is a kali released in 1976 on Kuldeep Manak's first LP, Ik Tara, by HMV. [1] [2] [3] The music was composed by Kesar Singh Narula and the lyrics were penned by Hardev Dilgir (also known as Dev Tharike Wala).
"Tunak Tunak Tun" or simply "Tunak Tunak", is a Bhangra/Indi-pop song by Indian Punjabi artist Daler Mehndi, released in 1998. It was the first Indian music video made using chroma key technology. [1] The song and the video were a success in India, cementing Mehndi's status as India's biggest and most popular popstar at the time. [2]
Tere Ishq Nachaya (Punjabi: تیرے عشق نچایا, translation: Your love made me dance) [1] is a Punjabi Sufi song composed by 18th-century mystic-poet Baba Bulleh Shah. [2] It is a popular song performed by Sufi and qawwali singers, including Abida Parveen and also featured in Sufi music album, Sufi –Ishq Bada Bedardi (RPG Sa Re Ga Ma ...
"Soch Na Sake" (transl. Can't think of) is a song from the 2016 Hindi film Airlift, an adapted version of Hardy Sandhu's "Soch", [1] sung by Arijit Singh and Tulsi Kumar.The lyrics for the song is written by Kumaar and the music is composed by Amaal Mallik.
Alif Allah (Jugni) (Punjabi: الف اللہ - جگنی), also known as Alif Allah Chambe Di Booti (Punjabi: الف اللہ چمبے دی بوٹی) is a popular Punjabi Sufi song that was composed and sung by Arif Lohar and Meesha Shafi in Coke Studio Pakistan. [2] [3] The lyrics of the song were based on the works of 17th century Sufi poet ...
Bajre da sitta is a Punjabi folksong, originally performed by the two sisters Surinder Kaur and Prakash Kaur, at a time when it was a local taboo for women to raise their voice. The song was further popularised following the production of the 2022 film of the same name .
The lyrics to "Jai Ho" were written by Gulzar and are a combination of Hindi, Urdu and Punjabi. Lyrics in Spanish are also included in the song "to go along with his [Rahman] Latin American touch of music". According to the India-EU Film Initiative, this inclusion "really makes the song quite unique and international". [1]