Sai Htee Saing

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sai_Htee_Saing an entity of type: Thing

Sai Htee Saing (Burmese: စိုင်းထီးဆိုင် [sáɪɰ̃ tʰí sʰàɪɰ̃]; 23 September 1950 – 10 March 2008; born Sai Tin U) was a distinguished Burmese singer and songwriter of Shan descent, which featured prominently throughout his music career. Throughout his career, he recorded two to three Shan language albums and 30 to 40 Burmese language albums. He was especially known for composing country music. Vital composer of Sai Htee Saing's songs is Sai Kham Leik. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Sai Htee Saing
rdf:langString Sai Htee Saing
rdf:langString Sai Htee Saing
rdf:langString SaiTin U
rdf:langString Yangon, Myanmar
xsd:date 2008-03-10
rdf:langString Langkho, Shan State, Burma
xsd:date 1950-09-23
xsd:integer 28826646
xsd:integer 1105447452
rdf:langString The Wild Ones
xsd:date 1950-09-23
rdf:langString Sai Tin U
xsd:date 2008-03-10
rdf:langString
rdf:langString guitar
rdf:langString vocals
rdf:langString Singer
rdf:langString
rdf:langString songwriter
xsd:integer 1969
rdf:langString Sai Htee Saing (Burmese: စိုင်းထီးဆိုင် [sáɪɰ̃ tʰí sʰàɪɰ̃]; 23 September 1950 – 10 March 2008; born Sai Tin U) was a distinguished Burmese singer and songwriter of Shan descent, which featured prominently throughout his music career. Throughout his career, he recorded two to three Shan language albums and 30 to 40 Burmese language albums. He was especially known for composing country music. Vital composer of Sai Htee Saing's songs is Sai Kham Leik. Sai Htee Saing was born in Langkho, Shan State to Nang Ein and U Nanda. He studied at Mandalay University, where he became one of the founding members of The Wild Ones, an ethnic Shan band, in 1973. Sai Htee Saing began his music career in 1969, when he aired a Shan language song on the Burma Broadcasting Service. The Wild Ones achieved major success in Burma throughout the 1970s and 1980s, known for composing their own songs in the Burmese language. Sai Htee Saing was also prominent in the Shan literature movement to preserve Shan language education in Burma. He died on 10 March 2008 in his home No.33 Dhamavihaya Road,Kyar Kwat Thit,Kyauk Myaung, Yangon, and is buried at Yayway Cemetery in Yangon.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 6793
xsd:gYear 2008
xsd:gYear 1969

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