Alibaba Aur 40 Chor

Alibaba Aur 40 Chor

Album Category: Hindi, Film
Year: 1980
Music Director: R.D. Burman
Lyricist: Anand Bakshi
Label: H.M.V.
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Album Credits: MUSIC ASSISTANTS: Basu Chakravarty, Manohari Singh. SONGS RECORDED BY: Kaushik, AT: Recording Centre.
 
Film Credits: DIRECTOR: Umesh Mehra, Latif Fayziev. PRODUCER: F.C. Mehra. STORY: Boris Saakov, Shanti Prakash Bakshi. SCREENPLAY: Boris Saakov, More...
 



Song Listing


 
Aaja Sar-E-Bazar
Singer: Lata Mangeshkar
Music Director: R.D. Burman
Lyricist: Anand Bakshi
Genre: Filmi
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Music
Music Director: R.D. Burman
Genre: Filmi
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Khatooba Khatooba
Singer: Asha Bhosle
Music Director: R.D. Burman
Lyricist: Anand Bakshi
Genre: Filmi, Arabic
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Jadugar Jadu Kar Jayega
Singer: Kishore Kumar, Asha Bhosle
Music Director: R.D. Burman
Lyricist: Anand Bakshi
Genre: Filmi
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Qayamat
Singer: Lata Mangeshkar
Music Director: R.D. Burman
Lyricist: Anand Bakshi
Genre: Filmi
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Saare Shahar Mein Ek Hasin Hai
Singer: Lata Mangeshkar, Asha Bhosle
Music Director: R.D. Burman
Lyricist: Anand Bakshi
Genre: Filmi
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Awards


 
  • No award information available.

Trivia


 

    Album

  • This film was an Indo-Soviet joint production made with Indian and Russian cast and crew. Producer F.C. Mehra's next film, "Sohni Mahiwal" (1984), was also an Indo-Russian collaboration.[1]
  • Yogesh was originally supposed to write the lyrics for the songs of this film. He had just finished working on the film "Hamaare Tumhare" (1978) with R.D. Burman and was supposed to start work on this film. One day, as Yogesh entered Burman's music room, the music director's assistant, Sapan Chakraborty, had said something insulting in Bengali about the lyricist to Burman, not knowing that Yogesh understood the language. An aggrieved Yogesh had walked out of the film there and then, and Anand Bakshi had been brought in to replace him. R.D. Burman and Yogesh's relationship had gotten strained after the incident, but the two had eventually made up and resumed working together with the film "Shaukeen" (1982).[2][3][MR9]
  • The film was an adaptation of a story from the "Arabian Nights", a collection of folk tales compiled in Arabic in the eighth century.

    Song

  • Khatooba Khatooba - The Arabic-sounding word Khatooba is actually a word made-up by R.D. Burman.



References


 

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