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Scherzinger's version replaces the original tune's Hindi words with English lyrics, including the chorus, "You are the reason that I breathe/ You are the reason that I still believe/ You are my destiny/ Jai ho." [9] Stephanie Nolen of The Globe and Mail the lyrics as "racier than the original Hindi words by Indian poet Gulzar." [10] "Jai Ho!
"Jai Ho" accompanies a choreographed dance sequence at the end credits of the film (choreographed by Longinus Fernandes). Indian singer Tanvi Shah wrote and provided vocals for an English section of the song. "Jai Ho" is a phrase which can be roughly translated as "Let [the] victory prevail", "Let there be victory", or "May there always be ...
Slumdog Millionaire: Music from the Motion Picture is the soundtrack album of the British drama film of the same name, directed by Danny Boyle.The original score and songs were composed by A. R. Rahman, who planned the score in two months and completed it in 20 days, [1] a far shorter time period than usual.
Jai Ho (transl. Let there be Victory ) is a 2014 Indian Hindi -language political action drama film directed by Sohail Khan , who also produced the film under the banner Sohail Khan Productions and co-produced by Sunil Lulla under Eros International , which distributed the film.
"Jaya Ho", a Christian hymn written in the Hindi language and usually titled "Victory Hymn" when translated into English Jai Ho (film) , a 2014 Bollywood film starring Salman Khan See also
Rahman organised the tour in 2010, following the success of his soundtrack album Slumdog Millionaire, and particularly the song "Jai Ho". The tour was kicked off on June 11 at the Nassau Coliseum in New York and was initially decided to span 16 major cities worldwide. [ 1 ]
The Hindi word "jai" sounds almost exactly like the English word "jay," especially when spoken with an American accent. Pronouncing "jai" as rhyming with "high" is an unfortunately all-too-common way of mispronouncing the word in the West. "Jai ho" indeed rhymes with "hey ho." --Hnsampat 22:03, 17 April 2009 (UTC)
"Jaya Ho" originated from folk music in northern India. Taiwanese ethnomusicologist I-to Loh, whom Perkins School of Theology professor C. Michael Hawn called the "foremost scholar on Asian hymnody", said the first phrase of the song, "Jaya ho", is the "most common phrase for praising God in the Indian subcontinent, with only slight variations". [1]