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Dhani is a pentatonic raga in Hindustani classical music. [3] It is a sprightly raga often described as Bhimpalasi sans the notes, Dha and Re. It however has its own distinct character. Dhani is frequently heard in popular music. [1] This raga is also known as the romantic version of Raag Malkauns.
Tamil: Sandham: Rajan Somasundaram: Kapilar (Kuruntokai 18) Bombay Jayashri: Rajan Somasundaram Suvakshoja Kumbham Sanskrit: Sharada Bhujangam Mahesh Mahadev Adi Shankaracharya Priyadarshini: PM Audios Palisennanu Sri Mahalakshmi Kannada: Palisennanu Sri Mahalakshmi Mahesh Mahadev Purandara Dasa: Priyadarshini: PM Audios Manase Manase Malayalam ...
Udayaravichandrika scale with shadjam at C. Udayaravichandrika is a symmetric rāgam that does not contain rishabham or dhaivatam.It is a pentatonic scale (audava-audava rāgam in Carnatic music classification – audava meaning 'of five') and is equivalent to the minor pentatonic scale in Western music. [4]
For the Malayalam-dubbed version Vasantholsavam, all lyrics were written by Poovachal Khader, [10] and Rajasri wrote the lyrics for the Telugu-dubbed version Jalsa Rayudu. [11] The song "Naanaga Naanillai" was well received and it based on Chandrakauns raga which resembles Hindolam . [ 12 ]
"Chuttamalle" is an Indian Telugu-language song composed by Anirudh Ravichander, with lyrics by Ramajogayya Sastry, and recorded by Shilpa Rao, for the soundtrack album of the 2024 film Devara: Part 1. [1] It was released on 5 August 2024 (released on YouTube as a lyrical video song) as the second single from the album, through T-Series. [2]
The Tamil version of the soundtrack opened to positive reviews from critics. Behindwoods wrote in its review "Typical Santhosh in full form" and gave a rating of 3.25 out of 5. [ 15 ] Siddharth Srinivas in his music review for Sify , gave a rating of 3.5 out of 5 and wrote "The best thing about Irudhi Suttru is how the album hints you about the ...
Reviewing the Tamil version, Randor Guy of The Hindu stated that the songs "contributed to the [film's] success". [7] Reviewing the Telugu version, M. L. Narasimham from the same newspaper also praised the songs, noting, "The major contribution to the film's success, however, came from the music director, a genius called C. R. Subbaraman.
Prior to his movie career, Kalyanasundaram worked for Kuyil, a Tamil magazine run by his mentor, Bharathidasan. He first wrote lyrics for a Tamil movie Paditha Penn , penning five songs that were released ahead on November 13th, 1955 under the music director, G. Ramanathan .