Friday, January 20, 2017

Sugauli Sandhi Song By Ambar Gurung

Amer Gurung was a Nepalese arranger, craftsman, and lyricist. He furthermore framed Nepal's national melody of acclaim, "Sayaun Thunga Phool Ka" Mahasangeetkar Amber Gurung was considered in Darjeeling, India, where his father, Ujir Singh Gurung, a past officer in the British Indian Army, was serving as a policeman from Gorkha zone, Nepal. His mother encouraged him to sing and shape as a tyke, and he showed himself to play both Nepali, Indian and Western instruments. He learned at Turnbull School, Darjeeling, where he had turned out to be pitifully enchanted with music singing Bible hymns. In the 1950s, one of his basic affiliations was with the Nepali craftsman Agam Singh Giri. He transformed into the director of Bhanu Bhakta School built up by Giri and sorted out a music school, the Art Academy of Music, in the school's premises. He recorded his notable tune "Nau Lakh Tara" (a tune about the sufferings of the Nepali diaspora in India) in the mid 1960s, formed by Agam Singh Giri. His understudies at his organization included entertainers and craftsmen, for instance, Gopal Yonzon, Karma Yonzon, Aruna Lama, Sharan Pradhan, Peter Karthak, Indra Gajmer, Jitendra Bardewa and Ranjit Gazmer. He went about as the Music Chief of Folk Entertainment Unit, Government of West Bengal, Darjeeling from 1962 to 1965. Here, he was expelled from singing or recording songs outside the unit. He moved and settled in Kathmandu, Nepal, in 1969.

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