Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pann, which is the classical music form of Southern India, has a long history in Tamil Nadu. Later the name was mistakenly changed as Carnatic music. Even today Pannisai is sung in temple festivals. Tamil Nadu has produced a number of famous performers, as well as a closely related classical dance form Bharatha Natyam.
As per Tamil literature, dance forms formed a part of nun kalaigal (fine art forms) which also included music, and drama. Bharatanatyam is a major genre of classical dance that originated in the state. There are a lot of folk dance forms that are practised in the region, some of which trace their origins to the Sangam period (3rd century BCE).
Tamil Nadu has a very ancient and rich form of folk music, some of which is disappearing due to the importance given to Carnatic music as well as the pop movie industries taking over. Some of the well known Tamil folk singers today are Dr. Vijayalakshmi Navaneethakrishnan , Pushpavanam Kuppusamy , Anitha Kuppusamy , Chinnaponnu Paravai ...
Tamil folk culture refers to folk arts and crafts of the Tamil people. Folk arts and crafts are an integral part of the Tamil culture . Tamil folk arts include music i.e. Naattupurapaattu , dance styles, songs, games, crafts, herbal medicine, food, sculpture, costumes, stories, proverbs, and mythology.
In the post-Sangam period, between the third and the fifth centuries CE, Tamil music evolved to a higher sophistication. Cilappatikāram , written around the fifth century CE, describes music based on logical, systematic and scientific calculations in the arrangements of the dancers on the stage to represent the notes and panns .
Koondhalile Megam Vanthu (Tamil) / Kurulande Megham Varishi (Telugu) Bala Nagamma (1981 film) Ilaiyaraaja: K. J. Yesudas: Bilahari: Nee Ondruthaana Sangeetham (Tamil) / Neethone (Telugu) Unnal Mudiyum Thambi, Rudraveena (film) Ilaiyaraaja: K. J. Yesudas: Bilahari: Kanna Nee Thoongada Bahubali 2: The Conclusion: M. M. Keeravani: Nayana Nair ...
India Today chose the track as one of the "top 15 Tamil songs of 2015". [44] The Times of India called it as "one of the best dance numbers of the decade", [ 45 ] as was DT Next which published the special edition of "10 iconic dance numbers in Tamil cinema" on the International Dance Day (29 April 2021), included the song in the list.
The early narrative poem Cilappatikaram, belonging to the post-Sangam period (5th or 6th century) also mentions various forms of music practiced by the Tamil people. Music was an integral part of the compositions of the Tamil Saiva saints such as Appar, Siva Prakasar, Thirugnana Sambanthar and Manikkavasagar during the Hindu revival period ...