NITN | @notintownlive | 15 Aug 2019, 12:10 pm
Kolkata, Aug 14: Santoor Maestro Pdt Tarun Bhattacharya unveiled the single album as a tribute to one of the veteran musicians of this country Sri Pratap Roy well known as Baby Da. Baby da who has played in this song as well is a renowned piano- accordion player of the industry of Indian music.
This was written as a poetry first.
But during writing the words came in such a way that they just forced me think to make a melodious number with these words.And thus the poetry was converted into a song.
Upohaar is based on one successful musician's story. His way of looking back to his past incidents.Lots of presents, awards he has received from his fans and followers though, he has the thirst to have something more. Some casual love from his beloved one, however, for formality at least, is all that he looks for till today. Down memory lane he reaches to flash back. Some small mistakes taken place made them apart.He still expects that misunderstandings will fade away and finally will be vanished.The known tune in the background will let the friendship win over the 'emotional sentiments'.
Music that first came to my thoughts, was a sound capable of justifying the lyrics with an easy but very sensitive melody. The melody must have a touch of hummable nostalgic flavour as well except some chromatics used to enlight the monotony getting reduced gradually. The song ends with a positive vibe portraying the surroundings ,as if, with its background score seeking for the friendship to get back once again.
- Vee Vault Capital invites first cohort of high-potential founders
- Sona College student Team Nexus AI designs an intelligent PLC programming assistant
- Ind.AI: Sovereignty, jobs, energy and the “What If?”
- Diabetes, muscle loss and the illusion of quick fixes: Why lifestyle correction—not shortcuts—remains our strongest medicine
- Kolkata: Rotary honours Padmashri 2026 awardee Pandit Tarun Bhattacharya
- Kolkata: Rotary Club of Calcutta Pointers, Indian Cancer Society host cancer awareness, screening camp
- ‘This Union budget is about building capacity, not chasing short-term consumption’
- AI will replace surgeons, coders — and billions of jobs, warns Sraddhalu Ranade at MCHD-SKC Memorial Lecture
- Religion without servility: Journalist Anshul Chaturvedi on why Vivekananda speaks to believers and atheists alike
- Culturist Sundeep Bhutoria unveils anthology When Gods Don't Matter at Jaipur LitFest 2026
Passengers booking flights with IndiGo will have to pay more starting March 14 after the airline announced an additional fuel charge on all domestic and international routes amid rising fuel prices linked to the ongoing Middle East conflict.
Amid the ongoing Middle East conflict, global flight operations continue to face disruptions, with limited services and rising airfares affecting travellers across several regions.
Air India on Tuesday announced a phased increase in fuel surcharges across its domestic and international network, citing a sharp rise in aviation fuel prices triggered by the ongoing conflict between Iran and the United States in the Middle East.
