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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. [4]
A Malaysian Tamil telefilm titled Kanmani Anbodu Kadhalan was released in 2020 on Astro Vaanavil. [55] The 2024 Malayalam film Manjummel Boys set in Kodaikanal pays tribute to Gunaa by using the song "Kanmani Anbodu" in the starting credits and at several points in the film. [56]
Song Language Music director Lyrics Ref. ... Kanmani Anbodu Kadhalan: Tamil: Vaali: 1992: ... Song Album Composer Role Ref(s) 1999
Song Music director Channel Note(s) 2000: Kula Vilakku "Vaan Sindhum" T. Vijayshankar: Sun TV: This serial had two different title tracks; first track sung by K. S. Chithra was used in first few episodes and S. Janaki's song was added from episode 49.
The songs have a strong melody base with simple yet powerful lyrics. The music album is complemented by the visualizations to the songs. Kanmani stands out as a phenomenon that was mostly marketed via the web. It is one of the first Malayalam albums to tap into the power of video sharing sites like YouTube and social networks like orkut.
On 22 May 2024, music composer Ilaiyaraaja issued a formal notice to the producers of Manjummel Boys for the unauthorized use of his song "Kanmani Anbodu Kadhalan" from Gunaa. The notice, addressed to Soubin Shahir , Babu Shahir, and Shawn Antony of Parava Films, asserts Ilaiyaraaja's legal and moral rights over the song and reserves the right ...
It was remade in Hindi as a single, "Urvashi" in 2018, sung and composed by Yo Yo Honey Singh, with the music video starring Shahid Kapoor and Kiara Advani. [21] " Mukkabla" was remade as "Muqabla" in Hindi for the 2020 film Street Dancer 3D , in which Prabhu Deva stars as one of the leads, and an accompanying video song was released in late ...
This is the Tamil discography of veteran Indian male playback singer K. J. Yesudas, who sang in over 700 songs in Tamil films. [1] [2] [3] Yesudas's first film was in the film Bommai (1963) as Neeyum Bommai Naanum Bommai composed by S. Balachander.