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Mohammed Irfan (born 1 July 1985) is an Indian playback singer who sings predominantly in Hindi. He has also sung in Bengali , Tamil , Kannada , Odia , Telugu , and Marathi . Life and career
This is a list of playback singers from India ... Mohammed Irfan: 2010–present Hindi, Tamil, Odia, Telugu, Bengali, and Marathi Mohan Rathore: 2009–present
Star Voice of India is an Indian television singing competition that premiered on 18 May 2007 and ended on 24 November 2007 on StarPlus. The show was directed by Gajendra Singh , creator of the Sa Re Ga Ma Pa series, and produced by Urban Brew Studios.
Jo Jeeta Wohi Super Star is an Indian reality television series which aims to bring the winners of 'all' singing reality shows completed previously and the runners-up together competed for the 'Superstar' title under 'one roof'.
The Voice India was created by John de Mol in the Netherlands and is based on the original Dutch series. de Mol then began to grow and expand The Voice competition franchise and on 6 June 2015, the Indian version of the show was launched on &TV. In April 2015, The Hollywood Reporter reported that &TV would broadcast The Voice in June 2015.
Irrfan Khan (Hindustani pronunciation: [ɪrfaːn xaːn]) (born Sahabzade Irfan Ali Khan; 7 January 1967 – 29 April 2020) [4] was an Indian actor who worked in Indian cinema as well as British and American films.
The Song of Scorpions is a 2017 Swiss-French-Singaporean Rajasthani language drama film written and directed by Anup Singh.Produced by Feather Light Films [1] and KNM, the films stars Golshifteh Farahani [2] as a tribal woman learning the ancient art of healing and Irrfan Khan as a camel trader in his final film role.
Voice of India is associated with numerous journalists, historians, social commentators and academics such as Arun Shourie, David Frawley, Shrikant Talageri, Francois Gautier, Harsh Narain, Subhash Kak, Koenraad Elst, and N. S. Rajaram; nearly all of whom advocate for Hindu nationalism in varying ways and self-identify as Bauddhik Kshatriyas ("intellectual warriors").