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A. R. Rahman made his debut in Indian Music Industry with the 1992 Tamil film Roja.In his three decade long career, he has composed and produced original scores and songs for more than 145 films in various languages, namely Tamil, Hindi, Telugu, Malayalam, English, Persian and Mandarin.
Muthu is the soundtrack album composed by A. R. Rahman for the 1995 Tamil-language film of the same name starring Rajinikanth and directed by K. S. Ravikumar. It is the first film where Rahman, Rajinikanth and Ravikumar worked together. [1] [2] The album have six tracks in each with lyrics with lyrics by Vairamuthu. [3]
The film marks Rahman's fourth collaboration with Vikram after composing for Pudhiya Mannargal (1994), Raavanan (2010) and I (2015). [3] The songs for the film featured lyrics written by Thamarai, Pa. Vijay, Vivek and Jithin Raj. [4] The soundtrack was released at the audio launch held on 15 July 2022 at Phoenix Marketcity, Chennai.
Roja is the debut soundtrack album of music composer A. R. Rahman, featuring lyrics by Vairamuthu.It is the soundtrack to the 1992 Tamil film of the same name, directed by Mani Ratnam, and starring Aravind Swamy and Madhoo.
Alai Payuthey is the soundtrack album, composed by A. R. Rahman, to the 2000 Indian Tamil film of the same name.The soundtrack album consists of nine tracks from the original Tamil version of the album, whereas the Telugu version has seven tracks.
Allah Rakha Rahman (pronunciation ⓘ; born A. S. Dileep Kumar; 6 January 1967) also known by the initialism ARR is an Indian music composer, record producer, singer, songwriter, musician, multi-instrumentalist, and philanthropist [1] known for his works in Indian cinema; predominantly in Tamil and Hindi films, with occasional forays in international cinema.
It also marks Rahman’s return to pure Tamil folk. A memorable album overall." [22] Critic Srinivas Ramanujam of The Times of India set a score of 4 out of 5 stating, "Maryan does have a slight Kadal hangover, in terms of music, but Rahman hits the right note, literally, throughout the album." [23]
[15] [16] Manoj Kumar R. of The Indian Express said that the song "will indeed be the new Tamil anthem of sorts among the young population that led the pro-Jallikattu protests". [15] Hindustan Times wrote "In typical AR Rahman style, it moves from a beats-intensive tempo to soft-lilting melodious moments in a seamless fashion". [17]