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Sunday, December 24, 2017

Remembering Mohammed Rafi | Google Doodle pays tribute to unbelievable artist on his 93rd birth commemoration



Much the same as one of Mohammed Rafi melody's verses goes, " Tumse Achcha Kaun Hai'...Google Doodle pays a delightful tribute to unbelievable playback artist on his 93rd birthday. The vocalist known for notable numbers and adaptability to sing ghazals to qawwalis to bhajans, enthusiastic tunes and miserable outcries with flawlessness, Rafi saab made enchantment in music as a playback artist. 

Catching his excellent grin as he loan his voice to India's greatest whizzes, Google Doodle catches the sweet excursion of Rafi saab in Bollywood. Known for some, essential hits like Kya Hua Tera Vaada, Aaja Tujhko Pukaare Mera Dil, Yeh Reshmi Zulfein, Parda Hai Parda… and we could simply continue endlessly. 

Mohammed Rafi was conceived on December 24, 1924, in the town of Kotla Sultan Singh in Punjab which is currently a piece of Pakistan. He had learnt established music from Ustad Abdul Wahid Khan, Pandit Jiwan Lal Mattoo and Firoze Nizami. He gave his first execution before people in general at the young age of 13 when he sang in Lahore 

Rafi saab made his presentation in Lahore as a playback artist in 1941 under Shyam Sundar in the two part harmony "Soniye Nee, Heeriye Nee" with Zeenat Begum in the Punjabi film Gul Baloch which was discharged in 1944. Mohammed Rafi was welcomed by the All India Radio Lahore Station to sing for them around the same time he made his debut.From Dev Anand to Shammi Kapoor, Amitabh Bahchchan and even Rishi Kapoor, the vocalist went to sing for some ages in Bollywood. 

Mohammed Rafi got six Filmfare Awards and one National Award in his lifetime. He was respected with Padma Shri in 1967 by the Government of India. Mohammed Rafi sang around 7,405 melodies in a few Indian dialects including Hindi, Urdu, Odia, Maithili, Marathi, Bengali, Punjabi, Sindhi, Kannada, Gujarati, Telugu, Konkani, Magahi and Bhojpuri. Other than Indian dialects he additionally sang tunes in English, Farsi, Arabic, Sinhalese, Creole and Dutch.



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