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Raayan ' s soundtrack is composed by A. R. Rahman, in his fourth collaboration with Dhanush after Raanjhanaa (2013), Maryan (2013) and Atrangi Re (2021). [1] Initially, Sean Roldan was intended to compose the film's score as he previously worked with Dhanush on Pa Paandi and Velaiilla Pattadhari 2 (both 2017), [2] but was ousted as the project suffered financial problems under Thenandal Studio ...
The music and background score is composed by A. R. Rahman, in his fourth collaboration with Dhanush after Raanjhanaa (2013), Maryan (2013), and Atrangi Re (2021). [44] The first single, "Adangaatha Asuran", was released on 9 May 2024, [45] the second single "Water Packet" on 24 May, [46] and the third single, "Raayan Rumble" released on 5 July ...
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.
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The music is composed by G. V. Prakash Kumar, in which marks his eight collaboration with Dhanush after Polladhavan (2007), Aadukalam (2011), Mayakkam Enna (2011), Asuran (2019), Maaran (2022), Vaathi (2023), and Captain Miller (2024) and his maiden collaboration with Dhanush as a director.
She has recorded songs for film music and albums in all the four South Indian languages namely, Malayalam, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada along with the Hindi language and has established herself as a leading playback singer of South Indian cinema. Some of her inspirations are Sujatha Mohan (her mother), Shreya Ghoshal, Alka Yagnik and K.S. Chitra [1]
Music Aloud gave 8.5/10 to the album stating "Raavanan still makes for a great listen. It is, after all, a Rahman composition!" [ 11 ] Behindwoods gave 3.5 out of 5 and summarised "The trilingual aspect of this movie seems to have steered Rahman into expressing himself a tad cautiously as far as Carnatic ragas are concerned.
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 ...