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The song "Little Little" was written with Dhanush in mind, as he used to mix English, Hindi and Tamil words in the lyrics. [18] On curating the song, Kamil stated that: [15] "We had a song for Dhanush and I said 'Oh My God', it's a tough one. So, all of us were sitting one night and at around 9:30-10 we finished dinner.
In an interview, Rahman stated that the performed unplugged song would differ slightly from the soundtrack version. [11] [12] The song garnered overwhelming response with positive feedback from several viewers over the internet. [13] The official soundtrack version of the song was released as a single on 21 November 2012. [14]
The album was split into A-side and B-side, with the former consisting 7 tracks was released first on 31 December 2021, [2] coinciding New Year's Eve and the latter consisting of 8 tracks, was released on 7 January 2022. [3] A promotional event was held on the same day in Kochi, to launch the album in physical formats.
Santhosh Narayanan worked exclusively on Tamil films. He had four soundtracks released that year, the first being the album to the romantic drama Cuckoo. Cuckoo's soundtrack was highly appreciated by critics who called it an "alluring and immersive album" [24] and "the best soundtrack that composer Santhosh Narayanan has produced yet". [25]
[10] Dhanush sang the song in broken English, as a Tamil person might if his knowledge of English was limited. The song is also called a 'Soup' song, where 'Soup' (as in 'crying in [same]') is a colloquial Tamil word which refers to young men experiencing depression after love failure in a love relationship. [6]
The full video song, featuring visuals directly from the film, was released on 7 January 2022 on YouTube. [3] The song was also released in Tamil as "Oo Solriya Oo Oo Solriya", in Malayalam as "Oo Chollunno Oo Oo Chollunno", in Kannada as "Oo Anthiya Oo Oo Anthiya" and in Hindi as "Oo Bolega Ya Oo Oo Bolega". Although the song and the film were ...
The song "Auld Lang Syne" comes from a Robert Burns poem. Burns was the national poet of Scotland and wrote the poem in 1788, but it wasn't published until 1799—three years after his death.
The soundtrack album features eight tracks, with lyrics written by Arunraja Kamaraj, Gana Balachandar, Arivu, Vignesh Shivan and Vishnu Edavan. Composers Yuvan Shankar Raja and Santhosh Narayanan, [3] also sung one song for this film, while the latter collaborates with Anirudh for the second time after Remo (2016), [4] and the former's first collaboration with the composer. [5]