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Uruvam (transl. Figure) is a 1991 Indian Tamil-language Supernatural horror film, directed by G. M. Kumar. The film stars Mohan , Pallavi , R. P. Viswam, débutante Veera Pandiyan and Jayamala . [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
Mugamoodi is the soundtrack album composed by K for the 2012 Tamil-language superhero film of the same name starring Jiiva and Pooja Hegde in lead roles, directed by Mysskin.The film marks K's second collaboration with Mysskin after Yuddham Sei (2011).
The soundtrack for the Tamil version of the film was intended to be launched on 31 March 2011, [5] but instead the album was released on the occasion of Tamil New Year (14 April 2011) at Sathyam Cinemas, with director Mani Ratnam, cinematographer P. C. Sreeram, actors Arya, Jayam Ravi and Shiva and the film crew felicitating the event. [6]
Uruvangal Maralam (pronounced [uɾuʋaŋɡaɭ maːralaːm] transl. Forms can change) is a 1983 Indian Tamil-language drama film written, produced and directed by S. V. Ramanan who also composed the film's soundtrack.
24 is the soundtrack album, composed by A. R. Rahman with song lyrics by Vairamuthu and Madhan Karky, to the 2016 Tamil film of the same name, produced by Suriya and directed by Vikram Kumar. The album features six tracks and was released on 9 April 2016 by Eros Music .
Aadukalam (transl. Playground) is the soundtrack album for the Tamil film of the same name directed by Vetrimaaran.The film featured music composed by G. V. Prakash Kumar in his second collaboration with Vetrimaaran and Dhanush after Polladhavan (2007), and its soundtrack album features seven tracks; four songs, two rap numbers and an instrumental.
The soundtrack to the 1986 Tamil-language romantic drama film Mouna Ragam features five songs composed by Ilaiyaraaja and written by Vaali.The album was released through Echo on double LP, which features three songs on each side of the record, with "Nilaave Vaa" appearing twice.
All the songs in the film were recorded at A. R. Rahman's AM Studios in Chennai. [9] The song "Why This Kolaveri Di", which was adjusted in downtempo has been built around an ancient south Indian folk rhythm using ancient folk instruments like nadaswaram, shehnai, saxophone, urumee, thavil, drums, acoustic guitar, keyboards mixed with electronic synths and scratches, utilizing the singing ...