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The music rights for KGF: Chapter 2 were bought by Lahari Music and T-Series for ₹ 7.2 crore (US$830,000) for south languages. [7] The music rights of Hindi version was bought by MRT Music. On 21 March 2022, the first single titled "Toofan" was released from the album. [8]
The Times of India described the song "Oru Manam" as "melodious". [16] Critic based at The Hindu described "His Name Is John" as "a peppy gaana song" that "tells of the badass that is John (Vikram’s character)" [21] and The Indian Express also said "The song is unique as its blends Tamil rap with both Tamil folk music and modern sounds". [26]
A critic from The Times of India gave the film 2/5 and criticised the subplot and numerous flashbacks. [4] A critic from News18 wrote that "The highlight is Jai Shankar's sincere attempt to stay away from the clich's.
In response to the request by Ajith's fans, the makers agreed to release a single track prior to the soundtrack release. [8] [11] The song "Adhaaru Adhaaru" which is a mass number, sung by Vijay Prakash and Gana Bala, the only song that did not feature lyrics by Thamarai but Vignesh Shivan, was released as the lead single on 11 December 2014.
Director Bala decided to produce the remake of Malayalam film Joseph under his banner with actor R. K. Suresh reprising the role of Joju George. [6] [1] John Mahendran was signed to write the dialogues for the original script of Shahi Kabir.
Subha Sankalpam (transl. Good resolve) is a 1995 Indian Telugu-language film directed by K. Viswanath and produced by S. P. Balasubrahmanyam. [1] The film features Kamal Haasan, Aamani and Priya Raman in lead roles, with Viswanath playing a significant supporting role.
[2] A Tonic for the Troops peaked at No. 8 on the UK Albums Chart in 1978. [3] The album included the singles "She's So Modern", "Like Clockwork" and "Rat Trap". [2] "She's So Modern" reached number 12 on the UK Singles Chart. [3] The most commercially successful track on the album was "Rat Trap", which made it to Number 1 on the UK Singles ...
Except "Kuzhaloodhum Kannanukku", all the songs were composed by M. S. Viswanathan and the arrangements, orchestration and background score were done by Ilaiyaraaja. [7] [8] [5] The song "Vaa Vennila" is inspired from another Viswanathan composition "Vaan Meedhile" from the 1953 film Chandirani. [1]