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The music video of the song was officially released on 4 May 2013, through the YouTube channel of T-Series. [13] It was the last original song released from the film. [14] The song was ranked at position 3, in the list of "Best Songs of 2013" published by Bollywood Spice on 25 December 2013. [15]
The song was released digitally as a part of the soundtrack of film on 1 October 2013. [5] The music video of the song was officially released on 26 November 2013, through the YouTube channel of Eros Now. [6] [7] Popular ghazal singer Talat Aziz expressed his fondness to the song stating, "I liked "Laal Ishq" by Arijit Singh from Ram-Leela.
Armaan Malik is an Indian singer and songwriter. He made his debut in Bollywood by singing the song "Bum Bum Bhole" from Taare Zameen Par in 2007. He has sung in Hindi, Telugu, Kannada, English, Bengali, Marathi, Tamil, Gujarati, Urdu and Malayalam.
Sooraj Cherukat (born 1992), [1] known professionally as Hanumankind, is a rapper, songwriter, and singer from Malappuram, India. [2] [3] He released his first single "Daily Dose" from his debut EP Kalari in 2019.
Hiawatha and Minnehaha, a bronze sculpture created by Jacob Fjelde in 1912 near Minnehaha Falls in Minneapolis. The Song of Hiawatha is an 1855 epic poem in trochaic tetrameter by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow which features Native American characters.
"Fein" (stylized as "FE!N") is a song by American rapper Travis Scott featuring fellow American rapper Playboi Carti. It was originally released on July 28, 2023, as a track from his fourth studio album, Utopia, before later being sent to US rhythmic radio as the fifth single from the album on March 12, 2024. [1]
There was also an Urdu version of the song, "Babia" (1993), by Sajjad Ali. In India, versions of the song became popular through plagiarized versions in local Indian languages. A popular version was the Hindi song "Ladki Ladki" in the Bollywood movie Shreemaan Aashique (1993), arranged by Nadeem-Shravan. [8]
The members of the Indian delegation to the General Assembly of the United Nations held in New York in 1947 gave a recording of "Jana Gana Mana" as the country's national anthem. The song was played by the house orchestra in front of a gathering consisting of representatives from all over the world.