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"Zaroori Tha" by Rahat Fateh Ali Khan is the most-viewed Pakistani video on YouTube. It is also the first Pakistani video to reach 1 billion views. On the American video-sharing website YouTube, "Tajdar-e-Haram" sung by Atif Aslam became first Pakistani music video to cross 100 million views.
[16] [18] [60] In December 2022, "Pasoori" became the first Pakistani song to enter YouTube's Global Top Music Videos chart (week of 16–22 December). [21] [61] With over 700 million views on YouTube as of May 2024, "Pasoori" is currently the most watched Coke Studio music video of all time and the first Coke Studio song to reach this ...
The members of U2 liked it but had difficulty finding a song into which they could incorporate it. [2] At the request of Mullen, their recording engineer created a loop of the pattern. [1] While the band were stuck in a long meeting upstairs in the studio, producers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois continued to work on music downstairs. Eno cued up ...
He was introduced to Bombay cinema with a Urdu film song Chupke Chupke Raat Din written by the poet Hasrat Mohani in B R Chopra's film, Nikaah (1982). [7] Other popular ghazals include Hungama Hai Kyun Barpa and Awaargi .
Aina, (Urdu: آئینہ), also known as The Mirror, is a 1977 [1] Pakistani romantic drama film directed by Nazar-ul-Islam and starring Nadeem and Shabnam. Singers are Mehdi Hassan, Mehnaz, Nayyara Noor, and Alamgir. The film was a major box-office success primarily due to its music, which was composed by Robin Ghosh. [2]
The music for "Where the Streets Have No Name" originated from a demo that guitarist The Edge composed the night before U2 resumed The Joshua Tree sessions. In an upstairs room at Melbeach House—his newly purchased home—he used a four-track tape machine to record an arrangement of keyboards, bass, guitar, and a drum machine.
After a couple of months being released, "Go Up" received very minimal reception and the group already decided to stop. However, on September 2, 2019, a fan posted the dance practice video on Twitter and Facebook, [7] promoting the group and saying that she "didn't feel any cringe at all" while listening to the song. Her post quickly gained ...
The music video of the song featured Rafaqat Ali Khan and Shiraz Uppal. It was released on 23 September 2016. It was released on 23 September 2016. It was the 3rd Pakistani origin Coke Studio video to reach 100 million views after Tajdar-e-Haram (1st video), [ 6 ] Afreen Afreen (2nd video) [ 7 ] and Tera Woh Pyar (4th video).