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The lyrics were written by Ramajogayya Sastry in Telugu, Vishnu Edavan, Vignesh Shivan and Pa. Vijay in Tamil, Manoj Muntashir and Kausar Munir in Hindi, Mankombu Gopalakrishnan in Malayalam and Varadaraj Chikkaballapura in Kannada. The soundtrack album which consisted of four songs was released under the T-Series label on 1 March 2024. [1]
The music video of the song released on 25 September 2015, through the YouTube channel of T-Series Telugu. [7] The song has received more than 58 million views on YouTube. [7] The song was released in Tamil as Deerane, [8] In Hindi as Khoya Hain [9] [10] and in Malayalam as Njan Chendena. [11]
Lyrics by Viveka: Vettaiyan: Manasilaayo Anirudh Ravichander Malaysia Vasudevan, Yugendran Vasudevan, Anirudh Ravichander: Lyrics by Super Subu, Vishnu Edavan Petta Rap: Athirattum Dum D. Imman: D. Imman [5] Devara: Part 1: Paththavaikkum: Anirudh Ravichander Dubbed version [6] Kanguva: Fire Song Devi Sri Prasad: V. M. Mahalingam,Senthil Ganesh ...
Tirumurai (Tamil: திருமுறை, meaning Holy Order) is a twelve-volume compendium of songs or hymns in praise of Shiva in the Tamil language from the 6th to the 11th century CE by various poets in Tamil Nadu. Nambiyandar Nambi compiled the first seven volumes by Appar, Sambandar, and Sundarar as Tevaram during the 12th century.
Digital Tevaram, by French Institute of Pondicherry, contains an English translation of the entire Tevaram; Project Madurai, a repository of ancient Tamil literature in PDFs; Tevaram songs, audio files of hymns available at Shaivam.org; Thevaaram.org, Dharmapuram Adheenam's web site giving the transliteration & translation of the Tirumurai
The twenty songs of Thiruvempavai and ten songs of Tiruppalliezhuchi on the Tirupperunturai Lord are sung all over Tamil Nadu in the holy month of Margazhi (The 9th month of the Tamil calendar, December and January). Manikkavacakar is believed to have won intellectual arguments with Buddhists of Ceylon at Chidambaram. [12]
The three foremost Nayanars with Manikkavacakar - collectively called the Nalvar: (from left) Sambandar, Appar, Sundarar, and Manikkavacakar. Tevaram literally means, "garland of divine songs" and refers to the collection of verses sung in praise of Shiva, the supreme god of the Shaivite sect of Hinduism, by three Tamil poets known as Shaiva Kuruvars - Sambandar, Appar, and Sundarar. [2]
The song incorporates a lyric scheme where each verse forms the acrostic "F.E.A.R." (for example, "For each a road" and "Fallen empires are ruling").In an interview with Clash magazine, Brown said that a main influence for "F.E.A.R." was The Autobiography of Malcolm X, which preached the study of etymology, so that one could have "control over people through the use of language."