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Minnale is the debut soundtrack album composed by Harris Jayaraj for the 2001 Indian Tamil-language film of the same name, starring Madhavan, Abbas, Reema, Vivek and Nagesh, and directed by Gautham Vasudev Menon in his directorial debut. [1] The film's soundtrack comprised nine songs, written by Vaali, Thamarai and C. S. Amudhan.
Minnale was dubbed into Telugu under the name Cheli and also performed well at the box office, owing to Madhavan's popularity in Andhra Pradesh. [ 15 ] [ 16 ] The success of Minnale led to producer Vashu Bhagnani signing Menon on to direct the Hindi language remake of the film in the same year, Rehnaa Hai Terre Dil Mein (2001), which featured ...
[8] [9] In late September, the song was eventually titled as "Hey Minnale" and being Prakash's 700th song he composed. [10] It featured lyrics written by Karthik Netha and sung by Haricharan and Shweta Mohan. [11] The song appears in the film when Mukund (Sivakarthikeyan) meets Indhu Rebecca Varghese (Sai Pallavi) during their studies at Madras ...
The music was composed by Harris Jayaraj, which was the first film he had signed to work on, though Minnale ended up releasing earlier. [9] The audio cassette of the film was launched in a function held at Taj Coromandel Chennai, where Miss Universe 2000 pageant winner Lara Dutta was the event's chief guest. [10]
Gautham Vasudev Menon remade the film in Telugu as Gharshana (2004) for producer Venkata Raj. [26] In July 2004, Menon agreed terms to direct and produce another version of Kaakha Kaakha in Hindi with Sunny Deol in the lead role and revealed that the script was written five years ago with Deol in mind, but the film eventually failed to take off ...
Soundtrack was composed by S. A. Rajkumar, with lyrics by Vairamuthu. [5] Venky of Chennai Online wrote, "Madhavan's first movie in Tamil 'Alai Payuthe' and third, 'Minnale' have good songs but unfortunately his second, 'Ennavale', was a big letdown".
Alai Payuthey is the soundtrack album, composed by A. R. Rahman, to the 2000 Indian Tamil film of the same name.The soundtrack album consists of nine tracks from the original Tamil version of the album, whereas the Telugu version has seven tracks.
The soundtrack features 10 songs composed by Rahman, with lyrics by Vairamuthu, except for the title song "Alai Payuthey" (which was created by the 18th-century Carnatic music composer Oothukkadu Venkata Kavi, who also set it to the raagam Kanada). The song "Yaro Yarodi" later appeared in the 2008 American film, The Accidental Husband.