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All songs of this film were composed by Zubeen Garg. Lyrics were written by Diganta Bharati , Rahul Gautam and Zubeen Garg . Bollywood singer Mahalakshmi Iyer returned to Assamese film industry after a gap of eight years.
Dr. Bezbaruah 2 is an Indian Assamese-language suspense thriller film released on 3 February 2023. It is a sequel of Dr. Bezbarua, released 53 years prior. [3] Dr. Bezbaruah 2 was directed by late Assamese actor, Nipon Goswami, who was also the lead actor of Dr. Bezbarua. [4]
Song Language Composer Lyricist Co-artist(s) Notes Ref. 1998 Snigdha Junak Nasaba Sokule Assamese Zubeen Garg Zubeen Garg Zubeen Garg First song released (debut) 2004: Jonaki Raati: Assamese First solo album: Dhulir Akakh: Assamese Manjit: 2008: Rong Phool: Assamese Assamese Folk album: 2009: Sinaki Osinaaki: Assamese Second solo album: 2010 ...
Zubeen Garg (born 18 November 1972), his contributions are mostly attributed in Assamese, Bengali and Hindi films and music. Garg has recorded more than 38,000 songs in 40 different languages in the past 32 years. [1] [2] He records more than 800 songs every year [3] [4] and has recorded 36 songs in a night. [5] [6]
9.1 Assamese album songs. 10 Albums. 11 TV Title Songs. ... (1968–2022) was an Indian ... New York "Hai Junoon" Pritam Sandeep Srivastava
Apart from singing in his Bollywood and Assamese industries, he debuted in Bengali music industry in 2003 where he sung two songs in the movie Mon. In the next year he sung three songs in the movie Shudhu Tumi and also was the music director in the film. [42] In 2005 he sung "O bondhure" and "Lagena Bhalo" in the film Premi.
In 1999, her album Nao Koina brought in a new dimension to marriage songs and was the common background music in Assamese Weddings. Apart her songs in albums like Xorotor Xondiya, Parinita, Upasana, Joan, Atitak Xuori and Shri Shri Durga topped the charts in the state. [3] [4]
It was first published in 1909 in an Assamese magazine named Bahi ("flute"). It was adopted as the Assam's state song in 1927 at asom chatrô sônmilôn ("Assam Student Conference") held in Tezpur, [2] and was officially adopted by the state government on 15 December 2013. [3] [4] [5] The song was translated to Mising by Tabu Taid. [6]