4 Responses to “Lata Mangeshkar. Naam Gum Jayega.”
Leave a Reply Cancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
conversations
- catching up with contributors: recent work from Amanda Miska
- recent poems from Devon Miller-Duggan
- Morphine. Gone for Good.
- Don’t Know Why. Slowdive.
- THE LIMIÑANAS featuring Peter Hook. Garden Of Love.
- John Maus. Do your best.
- Brian Jonestown Massacre. Just For Today.
- The Limiñanas. Salvation.
- Sean Rowe. I still miss someone.
- Donovan. Deep Peace.
- Steve Abbott. Long Haul on the Interstate.
- released today: the Worksongs for the Apocalypse issue
- editor’s love note for the new issue of PRJ
- Tricky. Aftermath.
- Super Preachers. Love Criminal (featuring Sista Moon).
- Sufjan Stevens. Should Have Known Better.
- Glorious. Foxes.
- Steve Abbott. Long Haul on the Interstate.
tweets
- Remembering that time we gathered and published a collection of Worksongs for the Apocalypse. Thank you, everyone w… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 2 years ago
- RT @splitlipthemag: Hey friends! If you can't afford the $10 entry fee for our poetry contest, we'll have 13 FREE ENTRIES available on our… 3 years ago
- RT @katkadav: Such a great idea & opportunity from Sundress Pub twitter.com/SundressPub/st… 3 years ago
- @Vanessid Just had this conversation with a colleague today. 3 years ago
- RT @MaxDunbar1: The princess is in another castle: finally there is a Beckett video game (@3ammagazine) 3ammagazine.com/3am/beckett-vi… 3 years ago
- @sslonewriter I would welcome this kind of reach-back from writers. 3 years ago
- @akmiska Looks wonderful! 3 years ago
- "How could the body be an accident? * Heat. You started to seek it. The urge is a missile." (love this essay) t.co/Au0uzxhS5D 3 years ago
- @mylesdoespoems the rustling reeds along the shoreline of every river I've loved, and that's all of them, feet and… twitter.com/i/web/status/1… 3 years ago
- @akmiska but the guy most likely said it way without the g 3 years ago
Such an ethereal, haunting song….pea river journal, how DID you stumble on this one from 8000 miles away?
I have loved this song for some time. One of my son’s friends was singing Piya Ho at our house one day, and her voice was so sweet, like a bell, and I knew the melody from the film Water but fell in love with her style of singing. And she said, oh, I listen only to Lata all the time. And our family love for Lata began then.
Lata is born with a precious destiny that finds its way to every nook, corner and alley of this universe – your story so validates this! Thanks for sharing Trish! Thanks for putting my curiosity at rest. 🙂
And I should say, as you know, Piya Ho is a Rahman song, not Lata, but the conversation with this girl led us to Lata. xx