A video from the BRICS summit showing world leaders enjoying a Russian folk song has been shared with the claim that the tune was copied from Vishal Bhardwaj’s composition “Darling aankhon se aankhein chaar karne do” from the movie 7 Khoon Maaf. However, this is not true, the tune existed long before Vishal Bhardwaj’s song. Reports indicate that Bhardwaj’s composition was actually inspired by a Russian folk song.
Sharing the video on X (Formerly Twitter) @coolfunnytshirt wrote. Russian copied the tune from Vishal Bhardwaj composed “Darling aankhon se aankhein chaar karne do” to make their folk song.
The truth behind the claims about folk song, Fact Check
As soon as the posts containing the video and claims came to our notice. Subsequently, we conducted research and analysis of the video and found that the song was not copied from “7 Khoon Maaf”. It already existed.
To verify the claims made by the users. We performed a relevant keyword search and found reports about the song. According to reports, Bhardwaj’s composition was actually inspired by the Russian Red Army choir’s “Kalinka”, written in 1860 by composer and folklorist Ivan Larionov. It was first performed in Saratov as part of a theatrical event.
Therefore, it is evident from verified sources that the folk song was not copied from 7 Khoon Maaf’s Darling.
Intent
Influencers are circulating videos from the BRICS summit with misleading claims to get the spotlight on social media.
Conclusion
Claim– Russians copied 7 Khoon Maaf’s Darling tunes to make their folk song.
Fact– It was not copied from Bollywood, in fact, the ‘7 Khoon Maaf’s Darling song was inspired by the Russian Red Army choir’s “Kalinka”.
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