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Roktim Rajpal of Deccan Herald also included "Unna Nenachen" as the best five songs sung by Balasubrahmanyam, which was published post his death in September 2020; Rajpal described it as "one of the finest sad songs of all time". [18] "Annaaththe Aaduraar" was included as one of the "16 Tamil dance party songs" by The News Minute. [19]
Ayan is the soundtrack album to the 2009 film of the same name directed by K. V. Anand and produced by AVM Productions starring Suriya and Tamannaah.The film's soundtrack featured six songs composed by Harris Jayaraj with lyrics written by Na. Muthukumar, Vairamuthu and Pa. Vijay.
Amaran (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack album composed by G. V. Prakash Kumar for the 2024 Tamil-language film of the same name, directed by Rajkumar Periasamy starring Sivakarthikeyan and Sai Pallavi as Major Mukund Varadarajan and Indhu Rebecca Varghese.
The album consists of seven songs with one bonus track composed by Anirudh Ravichander and lyrics were written by Vignesh Shivan, Vivek, Ku. Karthik, Inno Genga and L. H. Harish Raam. The audio rights were acquired by Sony Music India. Before the album release, three singles were released from the movie, with lyrics written by Vignesh Shivan. [1]
Harris played the tune first and asked Jayashri to sing, with lyricist Thamarai too joined the session. The recording of the song finished within two hours. [6] The track "Venmathiye" is a peppy but sad track, [7] which was reflected in the lyrics of poet Vaali, [8] set in Darbari kaanada raga. [9]
The soundtrack album features eight tracks, with lyrics written by Arunraja Kamaraj, Gana Balachandar, Arivu, Vignesh Shivan and Vishnu Edavan. Composers Yuvan Shankar Raja and Santhosh Narayanan, [3] also sung one song for this film, while the latter collaborates with Anirudh for the second time after Remo (2016), [4] and the former's first collaboration with the composer. [5]
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. [4]
Eega is the soundtrack album to the 2012 Indian fantasy film of the same name.Its Tamil version is titled Naan Ee.Composed by M. M. Keeravani, the film's soundtrack in both Telugu and Tamil versions features five songs, out of which one is a remixed version of the title song.