Tarpan (TV series)

Tarpan is a musical poetry series presented by poet and presenter Kumar Vishwas.[1][2] It is an appreciation of poets who are now dead, presented through readings of their work by Vishwas against a background of music. The series has its origin in Vishwas dedicating a song to Bharat Bhushan via his poem "Yah Asangati".[3] This came as an afterwork of Mahakavi series that was aired on ABP News which appealed to Hindi audiences.[4]

Tarpan
GenrePoetry
Created byKV Studio and ABP News
Written byVarious
Directed byPuneet Sharma, Prabudha Saurabh
Narrated byKumar Vishwas
Composer(s)Kumar Vishwas
Country of originIndia
Original language(s)Hindi
No. of episodes101
Production
Producer(s)KV Studio and ABP News
Release
Original release5 March 2017 (2017-15-05)

Poets included in Tarpan

Poets featured include Bharat Bhushan, Bhawani Prasad Mishra, Ramdhari Singh Dinkar, Dushyant Kumar, Suryakant Tripathi Nirala, Harivansh Rai Bachchan, Mahadevi Verma, Baba Nagarjun, Jaishankar Prasad, Subhadra Kumari Chauhan, Maithili Sharan Gupt, Dharamvir Bharati and Sachchidananda Vatsyayan.

The videos of the series are made available on video sharing platform YouTube.[5] The audio of the same are made available on different audio platforms like Saavn and Gaana.[6][7]

There was controversy when Vishwas and actor Amitabh Bachchan engaged in a war of words on Twitter. Bachchan alleged that Vishwas had infringed his copyright and said that he would seek legal remedy if the material was not removed from YouTube. Vishwas replied by saying he should have received appreciation for featuring the poem, written by Bachchan's father. The video was taken down and compensation paid.[8][9]

gollark: Or maybe our brains' language bits *are* actually hardwired for SVO-ish trees.
gollark: I imagine humans might be able to deal with it if you raised them with stacklangs from birth.
gollark: If you're sure.
gollark: *Your* skull? Wow, you really aren't aware of GTech™ operations.
gollark: Alternatively, bound variables and make excessively large stacks not idiomatic.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.