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"Do Deewaane Sheher Mein" is an Indian Hindi song from the Bollywood film Gharaonda. (1977). The film was directed by Bhimsain Khurana. The lyrics of the song was written by Gulzar, and the music was composed by Jaidev. [1] In 1977 Gulzar won his first Filmfare Award for Best Lyricist for this song. [2] The song was sung by Bhupinder Singh and ...
Song(s) Composer(s) Writer(s) Co-singer(s) Ref. Valimai (Hindi) "Mother Song" Yuvan Shankar Raja: Sameer RK/RKay "Meri Jaan" Sagar Desai Hussain Haidry Love You Loktantra "Na Jaane Kyun Dhadka Dil" Lalit Pandit: Sanjay Chhel: Amruta Fadnavis: Ponniyin Selvan: I "Rakshas Mama Re" A. R. Rahman: Mehboob Kotwal: Shreya Ghoshal, Mahesh Vinayakram ...
ShareChat's app Moj, launched on 29 June 2020, is a short-video platform that emulates the features of TikTok, which was among the apps banned by the Indian government in June 2020. In a tweet, Ankush Sachdeva, co-founder and CEO of ShareChat, said the app was coded in 30 hours.
Gulzar was born in a Sikh family as Sampooran Singh Kalra, to Makhan Singh Kalra and Sujan Kaur, in Dina, Jhelum District, British India (present-day Pakistan).In school, he had read translations of the works of Tagore which he recounted as one of his life's many turning points.
Song Artists Music Director(s) Running Time Chaar Sahibzaade Sukhwinder Singh: N/A 4:45 Sat Guru Nanak Pargatya Asa Singh, Shipra Goyal, Asees Kaur, Arvinder Singh Jaidev Kumar: 4:02 Mittar Pyare Nu Amrinder Gill: Anand Raaj Anand: 4:47 Vela Aa Gaya Jaspinder Narula, Shipra Goyal, Simran-Tripat: N/A 4:26 Sochte Hue Guru Aaram Karti Hui Foujon ...
Doha is a very old "verse-format" of Indian poetry.It is an independent verse, a couplet, the meaning of which is complete in itself. [1] As regards its origin, Hermann Jacobi had suggested that the origin of doha can be traced to the Greek Hexametre, that it is an amalgam of two hexametres in one line.
Uunchai (transl. Altitude) is a 2022 Indian Hindi-language adventure drama film directed by Sooraj Barjatya, written by Abhishek Dixit on the basis of an original story by Sunil Gandhi, and produced jointly by Rajshri Productions, Boundless Media and Mahaveer Jain Films. [2]
It was again used (with altered lines) as the lyrics for songs two films: in the title song of the 1999 film Sarfarosh (Zindagi Maut Na Ban Jaye), and in the 2002 Hindi film, The Legend of Bhagat Singh. The poem has also been used in the 2000 film, Dhadkan and the 2006 film, Rang De Basanti, being featured heavily for the track Lalkaar in the ...