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Baburaj was born on 3 March 1929 [4] in Kozhikode, then known as Calicut.His early childhood was spent in destitution and poverty. His father, Jan Muhammed Khan, who was a Hindustani musician from Bengal who frequently held concerts in Kerala, deserted his Malayali mother when he was very young, and returned to his native Kolkata.
Music 1 Nalla Thanka: 14 January 1950 P. V. Krishna Iyer Based on the legend of Nalla Thanka (Nalla Thankal in Tamil) Muthukulam Raghavan Pillai: Augustine Joseph, Vaikom Mani, Miss Kumari, Miss Omana and S. P. Pillai V. Dakshinamoorthy: 2 Chechi: 15 February 1950 T. Janaki Ram N. P. Chellappan Nair: N. P. Chellappan Nair: Kottarakkara ...
C. O. Anto was an Indian film singer in Malayalam cinema during the 1960s and 1970s. [2] His first film song was "Kummiyadikkuvin" for the movie Kadalamma in 1963. [3] He has sung 178 Malayalam songs from 160 films. [4]
Before the emergence of Malayalam cinema and its distinct film music, the people of Kerala avidly followed Tamil and Hindi film songs, a practice that persists to this day. The history of Malayalam film songs traces back to the 1948 film Nirmala, produced by Artist P.J. Cherian, which marked the introduction of playback singing in Malayalam cinema.
9 Malayalam songs. 10 Meitei songs. 11 Nepali songs. 12 Odia songs. 13 Punjabi songs. Toggle Punjabi songs subsection. 13.1 Non-film songs. 14 Sinhala songs. 15 Tamil ...
Palattu Koman is a 1962 Indian Malayalam-language swashbuckler film directed and produced by Kunchacko.Based on Komappan, a 1912 poem by Kundoor Narayana Menon, the film tells the story of Palattu Koman, a folk hero and skilled kalaripayattu warrior from the ballads of North Malabar.
Sreekumar made his debut in the Malayalam movie Coolie (1983) Directed by Ashok Kumar. The Malayalam movie Chithram (1988) directed by Priyadarshan, starring Mohanlal, was the first where Sreekumar sang all the songs. He has sung more than 35,000 songs [5] for films in Malayalam, Tamil, Hindi, Kannada and Telugu. [citation needed]
Old Malayalam, the inscriptional language found in Kerala from c. 9th to c. 13th century CE, [1] is the earliest attested form of Malayalam. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The language was employed in several official records and transactions (at the level of the Chera Perumal kings as well as the upper-caste village temples). [ 2 ]