Najma Akhtar

Najma Akhtar also known as Najma (born 18 September 1962)[1] is a British singer of Indian[2] ancestry. She was born in Chelmsford, England.[3][4]

Najma Akhtar
Also known asNajma
Born (1962-09-18) 18 September 1962
Chelmsford, England

Najma studied chemical engineering at Aston University, Birmingham: her father, brother and sister are also engineers.[3] In 1984 she won the Birmingham Asian Song Contest, and in 1987 produced her first album.[3]

Her unique and distinctive styles range from fusions of jazz with the Indian ghazal, doing updated arrangements of these ghazals (love songs and spiritual songs), along with traditional bhajans, Indian Semi Classical vocals and the occasional Bollywood hit.

She has also appeared as a performer in the songs and videos of other performers, such as jazz and rock saxophonist Stan Harrison.[5] Najma has also worked with saxophonist/flautist Michael J. Parlett, and with Robert Plant and Jimmy Page on the No Quarter DVD.

Discography

  • Ghazals, 1988
  • Qareeb, 1989
  • Atish, 1990
  • Pukar, 1992
  • Forbidden Kiss: the Songs of S. D. Burman, 1996
  • Vivid, 2002
  • Fariyaad: A plea to the creator, 2008
  • Rishte, 2009
  • Five Rivers, 2020

Notable Collaborations

Notes

  1. "Najma". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  2. "Pakistan's non-resident nightingale". Archived from the original on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 13 April 2019.
  3. www.musicianguide.com Najma Biography
  4. "Who is Najma, and what did she contribute to music?". eNotes. Retrieved 13 April 2019.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-05-21. Retrieved 2009-06-05.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
gollark: (which reminded me of some other evil idea someone came up with - the `gps` API sends your computer's ID with GPS pings, so in theory, if you controlled most GPS servers in one dimension, you could completely mess up or subtly offset certain people's GPS)
gollark: I also added a small note to https://wiki.computercraft.cc/Gps.locate about the results not always being reliable, since GPS is kind of vulnerable to spoofing.
gollark: It's more of a general guide-type thing explaining how to set up GPS hosts than information on how to use `gps host` itself.
gollark: Er, libraries.
gollark: The https://wiki.computercraft.cc/Network_security, which was admittedly mostly done by me then edited a lot by Lignum, links to some encryption APIs.
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