I wasn't able to find any credible evidence that the songs "Teri Aankhen Meri Manzil" from Kasam Teri Kasam (1993) or "Kya Majnu Kya Ranjha" from Coolie No. 1 (1995)
were deleted from these movies—meaning they appear not to be officially cut from the final theatrical versions. The information available indicates they were part of the soundtrack released with the films, with lyrics, videos, and references surfacing in archives and lyrics databases (none labeling them as "deleted"). (music.sacnilk.com, LyricsBogie, lyricsgram.com, topanbos88)
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“Kya Majnu Kya Ranjha” was indeed included in the Coolie No. 1 album, with release dates around June 30, 1995, credited to Anand–Milind (music), Sameer (lyrics), and sung by Sadhana Sargam and Kumar Sanu. (LyricsBogie, lyricsgram.com, topanbos88, Apple Music - Web Player)
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“Teri Aankhen Meri Manzil” is harder to trace—there’s no direct record confirming the song's existence, presence, or deletion. The Kasam Teri Kasam (1982) you're referring to seems to be a different movie from 1993, and the 1982 version doesn’t include such a song in its known tracklist. (Wikipedia)
What Should We Do Next?
Since I couldn’t locate definitive info regarding deleted status, we have two paths forward:
1. Dig Deeper
We can try more focused searches, especially for interviews, archival materials, or soundtrack listings that directly mention these songs as "deleted," "cut," or "unused"—particularly from sources like interviews with filmmakers, music directors, or film historians.
2. Adapt the Article Strategy
If our research confirms that the "deleted" angle isn't factual or there's no clear documentation, we can still craft an engaging article in a conversational tone—with SEO-friendly headings—around one of two approaches:
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Actual deleted songs in Bollywood history: Highlight real examples of songs that were written, recorded, but later cut—then touch on these two songs with the caveat that their deleted status is unconfirmed.
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Speculative or “lost gems” theme: Frame the article around interesting or lesser-known songs—like “Teri Aankhen Meri Manzil” and “Kya Majnu Kya Ranjha”—and discuss their contexts, why they might be less talked about, even if they weren’t truly deleted.
What Do You Prefer?
Let me know—would you like me to:
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Continue researching to confirm whether these songs were ever officially deleted?
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Or proceed with writing a full 4,500-word article, perhaps adjusting the premise to reflect what’s verifiable?
Once we nail that down, I’ll jump into an SEO-optimized, conversationally toned article complete with proper headings.

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