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Song Film / Album Language Director/Non-Filmy Album Description Ref 2005 3 Note Song Ilaiyaraaja Music Journey – Live in Italy-- (Telugu in a repeat performance in Chennai. Italy's concert was only music with the notes being hummed by Ilaiyaraaja) Composed for the Concert 2006 Yen Ooru Sivapuram Paraloga Perumpuram Guru Ramana Geetham: Tamil
Nearly half-minute video teaser of the song was released online on 22 July 2012 by Sony Music South via YouTube, sharing then through their official social networking pages. [ 17 ] [ non-primary source needed ] [ 18 ] On 14 August 2012 a forty second teaser preview of the song "Ennoda Vaa Vaa" crooned by singer Karthik was released on YouTube ...
Annakili is the debut soundtrack album composed by Ilaiyaraaja to the 1976 film of the same name. [1] The film is directed by Devaraj–Mohan and written by Panchu Arunachalam from a story by R. Selvaraj, and stars Sivakumar and Sujatha with S. V. Subbaiah, Srikanth, Thengai Srinivasan and Fatafat Jayalaxmi in supporting roles.
Third album on Ramana Maharishi, with 10 songs, with 6 songs written by Vaali (poet) and 4 songs written by Ilaiyaraaja, and composed by the veteran composer M.S. Viswanathan. 2008 Manikantan Geet Mala: Devotional album on Swami Ayyappa, in Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam 2009 Annamalai Ramanaandi: Devotional album on Ramana Maharishi.
The original Tamil version of the soundtrack album features seven songs and was released on 23 April 1991. [16] The Hindi-dubbed version Dalapathi has six songs, which were written by P. K. Mishra and released on Saregama. [17] The Telugu-dubbed version, which was distributed by Aditya Music, features lyrics penned by Rajasri. [18]
The five-song soundtrack album and background score of the Telugu-language crime action film Siva (1989) is composed by Ilaiyaraaja.The film, directed by Ram Gopal Varma and produced by Annapurna Studios and SS Creations, stars Nagarjuna, Amala Akkineni, Raghuvaran and J. D. Chakravarthy.
Ilaiyaraaja was born as Gnanathesigan in a Dalit family in Pannaipuram in present-day Theni district, Tamil Nadu, India, on 3 June 1943. [13] [14] At the time of joining school, his father changed his name from Gnanathesigan to "Rajaiya", and the people in his village called him "Raasayya". [15]
In May 2015, the FM radio station Radio City commemorated Ilaiyaraaja's 72nd birthday by broadcasting the composer's songs in a special show titled Raja Rajathan for 91 days. "Enna Satham" was one of the most-requested songs on the show. [18] Nandini Ramnath, writing for Scroll.in, described it as a "love song, lullaby and dirge rolled into one ...