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Unnai Naan Santhithen was released on 23 October 1984. [15] Jayamanmadhan of Kalki praised the performances of actors, Ilaiyaraaja's music, Dinesh Babu's cinematography and flashbacks but panned the climax. [16] The film became a success, running for 150 days in theatres, [4] besides earning a good name for Rangaraj in the Tamil film industry. [17]
Year Film Song Music director Writer Co-singer Note(s) 1960 Adutha Veettu Penn: Sayonara Tokyo: P. Adinarayana Rao: Thanjai N. Ramaiah Dass: P. B. Sreenivas
Ravishankar is a leading music director in the Tamil film industry. After his wife Sakunthala's ( Menaka ) death, he stopped composing music and prefers to stay away from society. One day, he gets a letter from his music teacher Krishnamurthy Sastrigal (Ra. Sankaran), who stays in Ooty.
Vishwaroopam is the soundtrack album, composed by the music trio Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, for the Tamil film of the same name, directed by Kamal Haasan. The album features five tracks, with lyrics penned by Vairamuthu and Kamal Hassan himself. The soundtrack's Hindi version Vishwaroop, has lyrics penned by Javed Akhtar.
The music was composed by Ilaiyaraaja and the lyrics were written by Vaali. [9] [10] The song "Ore Naal Unnai Naan" is set in the Carnatic raga known as Pahadi, [11] and "Kinnaththil Then" is set in Vakulabharanam. [12] Jazz trumpeter Frank Dubier and gospel trumpeter Stephen Lazarus played the instruments in the disco song "Ennadi Meenakshi". [13]
Unnai Naan is a 2008 Indian Tamil language romantic drama film produced and directed by Senthilnathan. The film stars newcomers Viinu and Naash, with Manobala, Sulakshana, Vennira Aadai Moorthy, T. P. Gajendran, Abhinayashree, Bhuvaneswari, Suja Varunee and Shakeela playing supporting roles. The film was released on 8 August 2008.
Swarnalatha (29 April 1973 – 12 September 2010) was an Indian playback singer.She recorded over 10,000 songs in 10 Indian languages including Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada, Hindi, Bengali and other languages.
To my love, Kanmani) is a song from the Tamil film Gunaa (1991) composed by Ilaiyaraaja, written by Vaali and sung by Kamal Haasan and S. Janaki. [2] The song was noticed for having dialogues interspersed between the lines, [ 3 ] and it was notably one of the few conversational songs in Tamil cinema.