Eso tumi eso, eso amar dhyane
| Eso tumi eso, eso amar dhyane | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Music and lyrics by Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar | |
| Song number | 0818 |
| Date | 1983 September 2 |
| Place | Madhumalainca, Kolkata |
| Theme | Longing |
| Lyrics | Bengali |
| Music | Kaharva |
| Audio | |
| License |
|
| Location in Sarkarverse |
|
Eso tumi eso, eso amar dhyane is the 818th song of Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar's Prabhat Samgiita.[1][2] For other songs with the same or similar first line (title), see Eso tumi eso.
Lyrics
| Roman script[nb 1] | Bengali script | Translation |
|---|---|---|
Eso tumi eso |
এসো তুমি এসো |
Come please, You please come |
Notes
- ^ For details on the notation, see Roman Bengali transliteration.
References
- ^ Sarkar, Prabhat Ranjan (2019) Prabhat Samgiita Songs 801-900 Translated by Acarya Abhidevananda Avadhuta Tel Aviv: AmRevolution, Inc. ASIN B082Z7FRXH ISBN 9781386976707
- ^ Sarkar, Prabhat Ranjan (1994) Acarya Vijayananda Avadhuta, ed. Prabhat Samgiita Volume 2 (in Bengali) (2nd ed.) Kolkata: Ananda Marga Publications ISBN 81-7252-084-0
Musical notations
Recordings
- Listen to the song Eso tumi eso, eso amar dhyane sung by Acarya Priyashivananda Avadhuta on Sarkarverse
| Preceded by Tumi amay jano |
Prabhat Samgiita 1983 With: Eso tumi eso, eso amar dhyane |
Succeeded by Aji vasante mor phulavane |
