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Sheikh is a song by Indian singer and lyricist Karan Aujla. The song was written by Aujla and music was composed by Manna. The music video was directed by Rupan Bal, and was shot in Dubai and Punjab, India. The song was released on 19 April 2020, along with its music video by Rehaan Records. [1]
The song is a Sufi rock ballad, which is the first of its kind in a Karan Johar film. It depicts the growing feelings of love between Dev (Khan) and Maya (Mukerji), despite being married to different people. [3] The trio used the traditional Indian instruments Santoor and Sarod which was played by Mahadevan. [4]
Karan Rana (Sohail Khan) and Bindiya (Nauheed Cyrusi) are childhood friends and live with Karan's brother Arjun Rana (), a very powerful and wealthy gangster.Arjun was actually adopted from the poor slums as a young boy by Suraj Rana and Karan is Suraj’s real son and Bindiya, the daughter of one of Suraj’s former colleagues.
Khan later said, "Karan makes no bones of the fact that his technical knowledge of filmmaking was not at its peak when he made the biggest hit of the decade." [13] The entire film was shot in nine and half months [4] with a substantial part of it shot in Mauritius. [17] [18] The title song was filmed over a ten-day period.
Karan Aujla is an Indian singer, rapper, and songwriter in the Punjabi music industry. He has released over fifty-two singles as a lead artist and thirty-four as a songwriter.
Karan Arjun was the second-highest-grossing Indian film of 1995, only surpassed by Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, which also starred Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol and Amrish Puri. [2] Worldwide, Karan Arjun grossed ₹450 million .
Karan Johar initially wanted to cast Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol, Rani Mukherji and Ajay Devgn in the lead roles of Dev, Maya, Rhea and Rishi respectively. [15] However, Devgn and later, Saif Ali Khan, who had previously collaborated with Johar on Kal Ho Naa Ho (2003), refused the film due to their prior commitments with Vishal Bhardwaj's Omkara (2006).
Bollywood Hungama gave 4/5 ratings and commented, "a contemporary and a progressive take on relationships from the master storyteller Karan Johar". [33] Raja Sen and Sukanya Verma of Rediff.com respectively rated 4/5 and 3.5/5 and said, "Thank you, Karan Johar for this film feels like a sob. Johar has improved massively as a storyteller, this ...