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After schooling, Susheela joined Maharaja's Music College under the tutelage of Dwaram Venkataswamy Naidu who was the Principal, in Vizianagaram, and completed Diploma in Music from Andhra University in First Class. P. Susheela went on to become the most successful playback singer of South India from 1950 to 1990.
Her first vocals were for a family song with P. Susheela, Mano, M. M. Srilekha and her younger sister Prasanna, composed by the music director Saluri Vasurao. [7] As an adult, she started her career as a full-fledged playback singer in 1999 with the song "Mangalagouriki" from the Telugu film Manoharam under the music director Mani Sharma.
P. Susheela is an Indian playback singer, associated with the South Indian cinema for over six decades. She has been recognized by both the Guinness Book of World Records and the Asia Book of Records for singing the most songs in different Indian languages by a female singer.
P. Susheela Ramakrishna Vissamraju (20 August 1947 – 16 July 2015) was a playback singer in South India. Personal life and career Ramakrishna was born to Vissamraju ...
B. Saroja Devi was born in Bangalore, Mysore State (now Bengaluru, Karnataka) on 7 January 1938 in a Vokkaliga family. [9] [10] Her father Bhairappa was a police officer in Mysore, and her mother Rudramma was a homemaker.
His Mother V.Jyothi is also a famous singer from Doordarshan Channel back in the 70s famously known as Jyothi Kanna. His grandmother is famous playback singer P. Susheela's sister. Saikiran has involved himself in many animal rescue organizations, including the Blue Cross of Hyderabad and Friends of Snakes Society.
Chithra was introduced to Hindi film music in 1985; she recorded her first Hindi song composed by S. P. Venkitesh, which was not commercially released. For the 1991 Hindi film Love, composers Anand–Milind, called upon her to sing duets song along with S. P. Balasubrahmanyam and since then, Chithra has recorded for around 200 Bollywood songs. [44]
Together with P. Leela, she reigned supreme in the South Indian film world in the early part of the 1950s, till P. Susheela took over the center stage from late 1950s. Though they were in competition, they were fond of each other and behaved like two sisters and sang many songs together. [3]