Amala Chebolu

Amala Chebolu is a playback singer in the Telugu film industry, also known as Tollywood.

Amala Chebolu
Born
Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, India
NationalityIndian
EducationBachelor of Technology
Alma materGITAM University
OccupationSinger
Years active2014 - present
Parent(s)Gopalakrishna Murthy, Saraswathi Chebolu

Personal life and education

Amala Chebolu, a native of Visakhapatnam, daughter of Saraswathi Chebolu, a vocalist, and Gopalakrishna Murthy, who works as HoD in Economics at B.V.K. Degree College. Amala completed her B.Tech from Gandhi Institute of Technology and Management popularly known as GITAM University.

Career

Amala started her cultural pursuit at a very early age and got training in music from Pantula Rama, a renowned Carnatic music vocalist.

She began her singing career as a playback singer in films at the age of 21. Sekhar Chandra, a music director first gave her a chance to sing the title song of the film Maaya directed by the national award-winning G. Neelakanta Reddy and produced by Madhura Sreedhar Reddy and her debut song is ‘Kalayedo Nijamedo’.[1]

Discography

SongFilmLanguageMusic Director
"Nuvve"NuvveTeluguSamuel
"Nee Roopam Edurugaa"JohaarTeluguPriyadarshan
"Whattey Beauty"BheeshmaTeluguMahati Swara Sagar
"Kalayedo Nijamedo"MaayaTeluguSekhar Chandra
"Mana Prema"Janaki Kalipindi IddariniTeluguGautham Dany Kanaparthi
"Merupu Theega"Vikramarkudi Love StoryTeluguVishwanath Ghantasala[2]
gollark: Anyway, ideally, for some purposes, we wouldn't associate gender with tons of weird things as is currently done.
gollark: It may also be worth investigating high energy gender physics as apparently this is vaguely quantumly similar to small distance scale gender physics.
gollark: Their gender is determined by a periodic or just weirdly varying function.
gollark: However, we may need new theories of "quantum gender physics" for small scales.
gollark: Obviously people can change gender substantially over larger timescales.

References

  1. "Tinseltown beckons". The Hindu. 22 August 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  2. "Top Tracks". The MIO. Retrieved 10 January 2016.



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