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Rakshak (Hindi: रक्षक, romanized: rakṣak "protector" [2] [9]) is the second studio album by the Indian heavy metal band Bloodywood, independently released on 18 February 2022. [6] [1] The album's music is a blend of Indian folk music and heavy metal, while the lyrics are sung in the English, Hindi and Punjabi languages. [6]
Bloodywood is an Indian heavy metal band from New Delhi, formed in 2016. They began as a parody band that uploaded metal covers of pop songs on YouTube [ 6 ] and later wrote their own music. They have become India's first metal act to chart on Billboard .
[citation needed] The version on their 2007 album, Crash and Burn, serves as the basis for Bloodywood's reinterpretation. Bloodywood guitarist and flautist, Karan Katiyar, has stated that the song was chosen due to it being unheard of outside of the country: "No one knew about "Ari Ari" outside India and that's where it worked."
It should only contain pages that are Bloodywood songs or lists of Bloodywood songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Bloodywood songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The Sinhala Baila song Pissu Vikare (Dagena Polkatu Male) by H. R. Jothipala, Milton Perera, M. S. Fernando is a cover version of the Tamil song Dingiri Dingale (Meenachi) from the 1958 Tamil film Anbu Engey. And it was covered again in Sinhala as a folk song named Digisi/Digiri Digare (Kussiye Badu).
"Surangani" was originally a Sinhalese Baila song. [1] The Tamil version was written and sung by A E Manoharan.The song has been dubbed in many languages. Manoharan did a bilingual Sinhala /Tamil rendition of the song which became quite popular in Tamil Nadu, mainly due to Radio Ceylon.
Mankatha is the soundtrack album, composed by Yuvan Shankar Raja, to the 2011 film of the same name, directed by Venkat Prabhu starring Ajith Kumar.The album features eight tracks, with lyrics penned by Vaali, Gangai Amaran, and Niranjan Bharathi. [1]
Ajantha Ranasinghe was born on 30 May 1940 [5] in Thalammahara, a small village in the Kurunegala district, as the second of five siblings. His father was a doctor and his mother was both a teacher and a postmaster.