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It is the official theme song for the World Classical Tamil Conference 2010, encapsulating the contributions of Tamil culture and literature down the ages. The song, a tribute to the Tamil language , features a fusion of various musical styles, including Carnatic , folk , acoustic , Sufi , rock and rap .
The soundtrack album of the Tamil version was released on 20 March 2017 in the presence of actors Suriya and Sivakumar coming as a special guest at the Sathyam Cinemas, Chennai. [ 17 ] [ 18 ] The soundtrack of the Telugu version was released by Mani Ratnam and A. R. Rahman on 24 March 2017, at a promotional event held in Hyderabad .
He also performed another song with Sunil, titled "Kaantha" which was based on the Malayalam song of the same title, with the lyrics being changed for the Tamil version. The third song "Maane Maane" was initially tuned by the band with additional production by Anthony Daasan , who wrote lyrics and performed vocals for the track with the band. [ 5 ]
The Tamil and Hindi versions of the album sold over 3 million units in India, with the Tamil version selling over 200,000 units [2] and the Hindi version selling 2.8 million units. [3] The Hindi version of the album earned ₹ 7.5 crore (equivalent to ₹ 58 crore or US$6.7 million in 2023) in sales.
The official audio of Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa was released at the BAFTA Awards held at London on 25 December 2009, which was attended by several film personalities, including the lead actors Silambarasan and Trisha, composer A. R. Rahman, lyricist Thamarai, director Gautham Vasudev Menon amongst others attending the event, which also featured a live unplugged performance.
While the audio rights of both Tamil and dubbed Telugu version was released by Sony Music, [3] the Hindi version was released by T-Series. [ 4 ] While the album has six songs in total, five additional songs, which were featured in the movie was released as a collector's edition special pack on 10 November 2010.
The tune of the song "Chennai Chandrama" was based on "Mahaganapathim", a kriti by the 18th-Century Carnatic composer Muthuswami Dikshitar in Nattai ragam. This song was used by Srikanth Deva as "Chennai Senthamizh" in the Tamil remake version M. Kumaran Son of Mahalakshmi. [3] The song "Lunchkostava" is laced with Tamil lyrics for the female ...
^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