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Billboard publishes annual lists of songs based on chart performance over the course of a year based on Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems and SoundScan information. For 2010, the list for the top 100 Billboard Hot 100 Year-End songs was published on December 8, calculated with data from December 5, 2009 to November 27, 2010.
Kesha scored six top-ten singles during the year—"Tik Tok" (entered the top 10 on November 28, 2009), "Blah Blah Blah" (featuring 3OH!3), "Your Love Is My Drug", "My First Kiss" (3OH!3 featuring Kesha), "Take It Off", and "We R Who We R"—the most among all other artists. She is also the 11th female solo artist to garner four top-ten songs ...
"Thuli Thuli" is a song from the 2010 Tamil feature film Paiyaa, composed by Yuvan Shankar Raja. The song, with lyrics by Na. Muthukumar and performed by Haricharan and Tanvi Shah, was released as part of the soundtrack album of the film on 12 February 2010.
Prior to the amendment of the Tamil Nadu Entertainments Tax Act of 1939 on 22 July 2006, the gross was 115 percent of the net income for all films. [1] After the amendment, the gross was equal to the net for films with purely Tamil titles. [2] The Commercial Taxes Department reported an entertainment tax revenue of ₹ 15.41 crore for the year. [3]
(Top) 1 Female playback singers. 2 Male playback singers. 3 See also. ... 2010–present Hindi, Tamil, Odia, Telugu, Bengali, and Marathi Mohan Rathore: 2009–present
The Billboard Hot 100 is a chart that ranks the best-performing songs of the United States. Published by Billboard magazine, the data are compiled by Nielsen SoundScan based collectively on each single's weekly physical and digital sales, airplay, and, since 2012, streaming.
The song "Thuli Thuli" had become the first Tamil song to be featured in the India Top 20 list for April 2010, indicating that it was the most frequently played Tamil song on all Indian FM radio stations in the history of Tamil film music. [76]
It is the official theme song for the World Classical Tamil Conference 2010, encapsulating the contributions of Tamil culture and literature down the ages. The song, a tribute to the Tamil language, features a fusion of various musical styles, including Carnatic, folk, acoustic, Sufi, rock and rap. [1]