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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mai Bhagi
مائي ڀاڳي
Mai Bhagi in the 1970s
Born
Bhagbhari

c. 1906[1]
Died7 July 1986 (aged 80)[1]
OccupationFolk Singer
Years active1958 - 1986
AwardsPride of Performance Award (1981)

Mai Bhagi (Sindhi:مائي ڀاڳي‎) (c. 1906 – 7 July 1986) was a Sindhi folk musician, born Bhag Bhari in Mithi in Thar, Sindh. Mai Bhagi grew up in a village in the Thar Desert. Her father was Wanhyun Fakir and her mother was Khadija Maganhar. Both her parents were known singers in their region at that time.[1]

Mai Bhagi's birth name was Bhag Bhari (which means 'a lucky person'). She was married to folk singer Hothi Fakir at the age of 16 in Islamkot Therparker. She shifted to Mithi Therparker in 1950 Permanently.[2] Record producer Sheikh Ghulam Hussain, husband of Pakistani folk singer Abida Parveen, offered her the opportunity to record at the Radio Pakistan studios, and her records were played on the radio. She started singing on Radio Pakistan Hyderabad from 1960.[2] Her folk song ‘Kharee neem kay neechey’ (underneath a neem tree) and 'Saman Sai Maan Ta Goli Ghulam Tohinji Dar Ji' became a super-hit among the Pakistani people and secured her stardom, her Lok Geet Song 'Murli Wari Man Mohiyo so popular in Rural area of Sindh. The government of Pakistan provided financial support for her to tour overseas, and she continued her career in music until her death in 1986.[1] You can read complete documentary of Mai Bhagi on popular Sindhi Music Website Media Music Mania.[3] Further Complete detailed Biography and selected best songs of Mai Bhagi listen on.[4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • | Mai Bhagi | Rare Sindhi Songs Collection | Sindhi Folk Songs |
  • Mai Bhagi and Murad Faqeer - Chirimiro bilal san pyar.
  • Mai Bhagi (singer) Tribute, Anniversary. Day in History
  • Mai Bhagi Program New Trend Song #awaztv #tiktok #sindhitiktok #trending
  • Khari Neem k Neechy || Song of Mai Bhagi || Marwadi || Thari || Lok Geet || FolkSong

Transcription

Awards and recognition

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "12 songs from Pakistan's mountains, deserts, shrines and streets". Dawn (newspaper), Updated 15 May 2014, Retrieved 9 May 2020. 15 May 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e 30th Death Anniversary of Mai Bhagi observed Archived 2019-12-30 at the Wayback Machine Published 8 July 2016, Retrieved 9 May 2020
  3. ^ "'Documentary Mai Bhagi' Read it". Media Music Mania. 22 December 2021.
  4. ^ "'Complete Biography and Songs of Mai Bhagi' Read it and Check". Media Music Mania - Best Music Songs Download. 6 September 2015.
  5. ^ Mai Bhagi's award info on Samaa TV News website Published 7 July 2011, Retrieved 9 May 2020
This page was last edited on 18 February 2024, at 17:19
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