Ravshan Komilov was born on October 26, 1964, in Tashkent. From childhood, he was interested in singing and had been playing the Kashgar rubab and singing since the 4th grade. The singer graduated from a music school and subsequently from the College of Culture.
Having mastered the secrets of music and culture with excellent grades, Ravshan Komilov graduated from the music faculty of the Pedagogical University. He began his professional creative career in 1987 on the stages and at events of the Tashkent State University. The singer's songs "Odam bo'laylik" (Let's Be Human), "Qarab qo'y" (Take a Look), "Tango", "Yurishlaring yoqadi" (I Like Your Walk), "Ozodani sevaman" (I Love Ozoda), and the duet "Xech kim bilmasin" (Let No One Know) performed with M. Asalkhojaeva were highly rated by fans and took their place among hit songs.
To date, the singer has more than 200 songs, 30 music videos, and 10 albums. His albums are titled "Odam bo'laylik", "Erka qiz" (Spoiled Girl), "Ozoda", "Sevib qoldim" (I Fell in Love), "Odamlar" (People), and "Dunyo" (The World). Ravshan Komilov has also appeared in a number of films. These include the multi-part TV series "Singilginam" (My Little Sister) directed by Lutfulla Sa'diyev which was broadcast on the Uzbekistan TV channel, "Otaga tik boqma" (Do Not Look Up to Your Father), and Rustam Sa'diyev's film "SMS". Ravshan Komilov was the winner of the "Kamolot" competition in 1991, a laureate of the "Ulugbek" award in 1994, and was awarded the title of Honored Artist of Uzbekistan in 2000. He performs concert tours across the regions of the Republic of Uzbekistan. In addition, he always participates in state events.
His art is highly loved not only in Uzbekistan but also in fraternal republics and foreign countries such as Russia and Germany.
Izoh.uz — A folk explanatory dictionary of the Uzbek language, with word meanings, idioms, and examples.
TVinfo.uz — Full TV schedules for today, tomorrow, and next week.
DostavkaInfo — A directory of services offering delivery of food, medicine, books, and household items.
Imlo.uz — Spelling dictionary of the Uzbek language. Over 85,000 words.
Lotin.uz — converts text between Uzbek Latin and Cyrillic script, and back. Easy!
The largest collection of proverbs and sayings, each in three languages (Uzbek, Russian, English).
The best jokes and funny pictures, every day. The Uzbek-language home of humor!
A service that finds the nearest currency exchange points with the best rates, and shows the location on a map.
The largest catalog of Uzbek Telegram channels. Active channels only, sorted by category with detailed statistics.
Learn to write correctly in Uzbek with us.
A synonym dictionary of the Uzbek language, with over 3,300 words grouped into around 900 synonym sets.