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"Kanmani Anbodu Kadhalan" (transl. 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.
On writing lyrics of "Phir Se Udd Chala", the analogies, he stated on introduction of offtrack lines like "Banu Raavan, Jiyoon Mar Marke" ("I become Raavan by continuing to live each time I die"), "The line was a metaphor for character Jordan who like the demon Ravan from the mythology Ramayana, dies a number of times and yet goes on with his ...
She has recorded over 48000 songs in films, albums, TV and Radio which includes solos, duets, chorus and title tracks in 20 languages including Kannada, Malayalam, Telugu, Tamil, Hindi, Sanskrit, Odia, Tulu, Urdu, Punjabi, Badaga, Bengali, Konkani and also in foreign languages such as English, Japanese, German and Sinhala; the highest number of ...
O Kadhal Kanmani is the soundtrack album, composed by A. R. Rahman, to the 2015 Indian Tamil film of the same name written and directed by Mani Ratnam.The soundtrack album consists of nine tracks each in original Tamil and dubbed Telugu version of the albums with one track "Maula Wa Sallim" being common to both.
The music was composed by Ilaiyaraaja and lyrics written by Vaali. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] The songs "En Kanmani", "Unna Nambi" and "Adada Maamara" became hugely popular. [ 2 ] The song "En Kanmani" was one of the earliest Indian songs to be composed in Counterpoint .
The next morning, Kanmani commits suicide. Akhilan, Anbarasi, and their child go back to Kanmani's village. Anbarasi's aunt hits Kanmani's husband as she thinks that it was because of him Kanmani died. Akhilan, standing right beside him, is all over guilty because it was he who planned all this to avoid Kanmani disturbing his married life.
Bombay is the soundtrack to the 1995 Indian film of the same name, with eight tracks composed by A. R. Rahman. [1] The film was directed by Mani Ratnam, and stars Arvind Swamy and Manisha Koirala, while the soundtrack album was released on 24 December 1994 by Pyramid. [2]
National Film Award for Best Lyrics [125] [126] Thaimadha Megam adhu: Thottu Paarungal: Thaimadha Megan -2: 1968: Lakshmi Kalyanam: Brindhavanathukku: M. S. Viswanathan: Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Lyricist [127] [3] Raman Ethanai Ramanadi: Sindhu Bhairavi [18] Yaaradaa Manithan: Thanga Thearodum: Poottale Unnaiyum: Pooti Vaitha ...