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The song "Ninnu Kori Varnam" was parodied for a comedy sequence in the film Themmangu Paattukaaran (1997) featuring Goundamani, Senthil and LIC Narasimhan, where the latter comically pronounces the first line of the song. [26] "Raaja Rajadhi" was parodied in the film 7G Rainbow Colony (2004), where Ravi Krishna and his friends perform the song ...
Enthiran is the soundtrack album to the 2010 Tamil science fiction-action film of the same name, directed by S. Shankar and starring Rajinikanth and Aishwarya Rai.The soundtrack album includes seven tracks composed by A. R. Rahman and was released on 31 July 2010 by Think Music. [1]
The lyrics of the original version were written by Irshad Kamil whereas the Tamil lyrics were written by poet Vairamuthu. The soundtrack album features nine original tracks. [ 4 ] The music of the original version of the soundtrack was released on the co-branded record labels Sony Music India and Eros Music [ 5 ] on 11 June 2013 and the Tamil ...
Among those 15 additional songs on the second part of “Tortured Poets” is a track called “Robin,” a piano ballad in which Swift draws imagery of animals and alludes to adolescence.
^b In the Malayalam version of the soundtrack, the track "Naadaga Gaanangal" is the Malayalam counterpart of "Alli Arjuna" with the same length but the names of individual bit-songs under it were not released officially. ^c The song features lyrics from the compilation "Thiruppugazh" written by Saint Arunagirinathar
"Chinna Chinna Aasai" was the first song Rahman had composed for the film. The song "Kadhal Rojave" has two versions in both Tamil and Hindi; a solo and a duet in the former. The Hindi version of the song was titled "Roja Jaaneman" has two versions – one by S. P. Balasubrahmanyam and the other by Hariharan.
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.
Manoharan did a bilingual Sinhala /Tamil rendition of the song which became quite popular in Tamil Nadu, mainly due to Radio Ceylon. Ilayaraja then made a Tamil version – which had very little to do with the Sinhala version except for the refrain – for the Tamil film Avar Enakke Sontham, sung by Malaysia Vasudevan and Renuka. This became ...