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Added on: 2020-09-28 11:19:04 Total Views: 1,655
Description: Video details - GHs6ar81QV8: Kumar, initially a fruit juice seller in Delhi, founded T-Series to sell pirated Bollywood songs before the company eventually began producing new music. Their breakthrough came with the soundtrack for the 1988 Bollywood blockbuster Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak, composed by Anand-Milind, written by Majrooh Sultanpuri, and starring Aamir Khan and Juhi Chawla, which became one of the best-selling Indian music albums of the 1980s, with over 8 million sales. They eventually became a leading music label with the release of Aashiqui (1990), composed by Nadeem–Shravan, which sold 20 million copies and became the best-selling Indian soundtrack album of all time. However, Gulshan Kumar was murdered by the Mumbai mafia syndicate D-Company in 1997. Since then, T-Series has been led by his son Bhushan Kumar and younger brother Krishan Kumar. Trade name T-Series Type Private Industry Entertainment Founded 11 July 1983; 36 years ago in Delhi, India[ Founder Gulshan Kumar Headquarters Noida, India Key people Bhushan Kumar (Chairman & Managing Director) Krishan Kumar Neeraj Kalyan Services Music record label Film production Owner Gulshan Kumar (1983–1997) Bhushan Kumar (1997–present) YouTube information Channel T-Series Years active 2006 – present Genre Music videos film trailers (5 February 2020) Total views 98.1 billion (5 February 2020) Play buttons Updated 5 February 2020 Website T-Series.com History T-Series was founded on 11 July 1983, by Gulshan Kumar, at the time an obscure fruit juice seller in the Daryaganj neighborhood of Delhi. The company initially sold pirated Bollywood songs, before releasing original music Back then, the Indian audio cassette market was small-scale, with widespread piracy, but there was a growing demand for cassette music. According to Rediff, while Kumar "was involved in piracy, he was passionately market- and consumer-driven." The company also took advantage of loopholes in copyright law allowing for the release of cover versions of songs, which T-Series would then flood the market with. Researchers Lawrence Liang and Ravi Sundaram wrote: T-Series was a profoundly disruptive force in the Indian music market, in large part because it was a tremendously successful pirate. The company built its catalog through a variety of quasi-legal and illegal practices ... [T-Series] engaged in more straightforward copyright infringement in the form of pirate releases of popular hits, and it often illegally obtained film scores before the release of the film to ensure that its recordings were the first to hit the market