Sai Kham Leik

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

Sai Kham Leik (Shan: ၸၢႆးၶမ်းလဵၵ်း, Burmese: စိုင်းခမ်းလိတ်), is a successful and prolific Burmese songwriter. Said to be a physician by training he is an ethnic Shan songwriter and has written more than 500 songs in Burmese, 200 in Shan and about 35 in English. His father, Kham Ka, was a noted poet and a former chief minister of Hsenwi Palace. He was born on 27 April 1949 in Hsenwi. He has three siblings. He married Dr. Nwe Nwe Tin in 1971 and has four children.. He taught anatomy at the University of Medicine, Mandalay from 1990 to . He is also a persistence promoter of Shan culture. He is vital composer of late Sai Htee Saing, a well-known Shan singer of Myanmar. They met in 1969 and later they founded a music band which became a successful The Wild Ones. "Panglong Agreement" is his mos rdf:langString
rdf:langString Sai Kham Leik
rdf:langString Sai Kham Leik
rdf:langString Sai Kham Leik
rdf:langString Thenni Township, Shan State, Burma
xsd:date 1949-04-27
xsd:integer 37829302
xsd:integer 1110930080
rdf:langString Sai Htee Saing, The Wild Ones
xsd:date 1949-04-27
rdf:langString
xsd:integer 1969
rdf:langString Sai Kham Leik (Shan: ၸၢႆးၶမ်းလဵၵ်း, Burmese: စိုင်းခမ်းလိတ်), is a successful and prolific Burmese songwriter. Said to be a physician by training he is an ethnic Shan songwriter and has written more than 500 songs in Burmese, 200 in Shan and about 35 in English. His father, Kham Ka, was a noted poet and a former chief minister of Hsenwi Palace. He was born on 27 April 1949 in Hsenwi. He has three siblings. He married Dr. Nwe Nwe Tin in 1971 and has four children.. He taught anatomy at the University of Medicine, Mandalay from 1990 to . He is also a persistence promoter of Shan culture. He is vital composer of late Sai Htee Saing, a well-known Shan singer of Myanmar. They met in 1969 and later they founded a music band which became a successful The Wild Ones. "Panglong Agreement" is his most cerebrated song among Shan since 1971. It was sung by Sai Hsai Mao and recorded in Thailand in 1974 with the financial support of a renounced Wa leader.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3616
xsd:gYear 1969

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