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The launch of "Semmozhiyaana Tamizh Mozhiyaam" was held on 15 May 2010. The video for the song, directed by Gautham Vasudev Menon, was screened to an extremely positive response. On 18 May 2010, the song was made available for free download from A. R. Rahman's official website and on 21 May 2010 from The Hindu ' s official website. [7]
After his 25th song "Vaadi Vaadi" (2005) in Sachein, Vijay took a sabbatical from singing to concentrate on acting, [3] but made a comeback with "Google Google" in Thuppakki (2012). He won the Favorite Song of The Year at the Vijay Awards for his performance of the song. [6] and a SIIMA Award nomination for Best Playback Singer. [7]
She recorded over 10,000 songs in 10 Indian languages including Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Kannada, Hindi, Bengali and other languages. Swarnalatha is referred to as The 'Golden Skylark(Thanga Vanambadi)' In Indian Music due her unique voice and mellifluous sound.
The Tamil-language film industry has produced and released over 10000 films since the release of its first sound film, kalidas, in 1931.This is a master list of listings of films released from 1931 in the industry by decade of release.
Date Title Director Producer Music Cast; 1 January: Aayiram Vaasal Idhayam: A. Jagannathan: Selvam Arts Ilaiyaraaja: Sudhakar, Radhika, Roja Ramani, Thengai ...
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]
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.
Gulebakavali is the second Tamil film to be based on the story of the same name from the Arabic folklore collection One Thousand and One Nights, following a 1935 film. [1] The film also involved a fight sequence between lead actor M. G. Ramachandran and a lion. [2] Thanjai N. Ramaiah Dass, who wrote the screenplay, also wrote the songs' lyrics. [1]