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Kanmani Anbodu Song Lyrics

Kanmani Anbodu Song Lyrics :

Kanmani Anbodu Tamil Lyrical Video Song from Guna Tamil Movie on Pyramid Music. Guna Tamil Movie Songs ft. Kamal Haasan, Rekha, And Roshini in the lead roles. Music composed by Ilaiyaraaja, Directed by Santhana Bharathi, Produced by Alamelu Subramaniam. Guna Tamil movie also stars Roshini, Rekha, SPB, Janagaraj and Girish Karnad among others.


Kanmani Anbodu Song Lyrics


Kanmani Anbodu Song Lyrics Watch Video :

 

Song Credits:

Song: Kanmani Anbodu
Singers: Kamal Hassan, S. Janaki
Music: Ilayaraja
Director: Santhana Bharathi
Producer: Alamelu Subramaniam

Kanmani Anbodu Song Tamil Lyrics :

ஆண் : கண்மணி
அன்போட காதலன்
பெண் : நான்
ஆண் : நான்
பெண் : ஹ்ம்ம்

ஆண் : எழுதும் கடிதம்
லெட்டர் சீ கடுதாசி
இல்ல கடிதமே
இருக்கட்டும் படி

பெண் : கண்மணி
அன்போடு காதலன்
நான் எழுதும் கடிதமே

ஆண் : ஹா ஹா ஹா
பாட்டாவே படிச்சிட்டியா
அப்ப நானும் மொதல்ல
கண்மணி சொன்னன்ல
இங்க பொன்மணி போட்டுக்க
பொன்மணி உன் வீட்டுல
சௌக்கியமா நா இங்க
சௌக்கியம்

பெண் : பொன்மணி
உன் வீட்டில் சௌக்கியமா
நான் இங்கு சௌக்கியமே

ஆண் : உன்ன நெனச்சு
பாக்கும் போது கவிதை
மனசுல அருவி மாறி
கொட்டுது ஆனா அத
எழுதனுன்னு ஒக்காந்தா
அந்த எழுத்துதான்
வார்த்தை

பெண் : உன்னை எண்ணிப்
பார்க்கையில் கவிதை
கொட்டுது

ஆண் : அதான்

பெண் : அதை எழுத
நினைக்கையில்
வார்த்தை முட்டுது

ஆண் : அதே தான்
ஆஹா பிரமாதம்
கவிதை கவிதை படி

பெண் : கண்மணி அன்போடு
காதலன் நான் எழுதும் கடிதமே
பொன்மணி உன் வீட்டில்
சௌக்கியமா நான் இங்கு
சௌக்கியமே

பெண் : உன்னை எண்ணிப்
பார்க்கையில் கவிதை
கொட்டுது அதை எழுத
நினைக்கையில் வார்த்தை
முட்டுது ஓஹோ கண்மணி
அன்போடு காதலன் நான்
எழுதும் கடிதமே

ஆண் : லா லா லா
லா லா லா லா லா
லா லா

பெண் : பொன்மணி
உன் வீட்டில் சௌக்கியமா
நான் இங்கு சௌக்கியமே

ஆண் : லா லா லா
லா லா லா லா லா
லா லா

ஆண் : ம்ம் எனக்கு
உண்டான காயம் அது
தன்னால ஆறிடும் அது
என்னவோ தெரியல என்ன
மாயமோ தெரியல எனக்கு
ஒன்னுமே ஆவரது இல்ல
இதையும் எழுதிக நடுல
நடுல மானே தேனே
பொன்மானே இதெல்லாம்
போட்டுக்கணும்

ஆண் : இதோ பாரு
எனக்கு என்ன காயம்னாலும்
என் உடம்பு தாங்கிடும் உன்
உடம்பு தாங்குமா தாங்காது
அபிராமி அபிராமி அபிராமி

பெண் : அதையும் எழுதணுமா

ஆண் : ஹான்
இது காதல் என் காதல்
என்னனு சொல்லாம
ஏங்க ஏங்க அழுகையா
வருது ஆனா நா அழுது
என் சோகம் உன்ன தாக்கிடுமோ
அப்டினு நினைக்கும் போது வர்ற
அழுகை கூட நின்னுடுது மனிதர்
உணர்ந்து கொள்ள இது மனித
காதல் அல்ல அதையும் தாண்டி
புனிதமானது

பெண் : உண்டான காயமெங்கும்
தன்னாலே ஆறிப் போன மாயம்
என்ன பொன்மானே பொன்மானே
என்ன காயம் ஆன போதும் என்
மேனி தாங்கிக் கொள்ளும்
உந்தன் மேனி தாங்காது செந்தேனே

பெண் : எந்தன் காதல்
என்னவென்று சொல்லாமல்
ஏங்க ஏங்க அழுகை வந்தது
எந்தன் சோகம் உன்னைத்
தாக்கும் என்றெண்ணும்போது
வந்த அழுகை நின்றது
மனிதர் உணர்ந்து கொள்ள இது
மனிதக் காதலல்ல அதையும்
தாண்டிப் புனிதமானது

ஆண் : அபிராமியே
தாலாட்டும் சாமியே
நான் தானே தெரியுமா
சிவகாமியே சிவனில்
நீயும் பாதியே அதுவும்
உனக்கு புரியுமா

ஆண் : சுப லாலி லாலியே
லாலி லாலியே அபிராமி
லாலியே லாலி லாலியே
அபிராமியே தாலாட்டும்
சாமியே நான் தானே தெரியுமா
உனக்கு புரியுமா

பெண் : லா லா லா
லா லா லா லா லா
லா லா

ஆண் : லா லா லா
லா லா லா லா லா
லா லா

பெண் : …………………………
ஆண் : …………………………
ஆண் & பெண் : …………………………

 

Kanmani Anbodu Song English Lyrics :

 

Male : Kanmani anboda kaadhalan

Female : Naan

Male : Naan

Female : Hmm

Male : Ezhuthum kaditham … letter chi … kaduthasi
Illa kadithamae irukatum … padi

Female : Kanmani anbodu kaadhalan
Naan ezhuthum kadithamae

Male : Ha ha ha … paataavae padichitiyaa
Apa nanum … mothala kanmani sonala
Inga ponmani potuka
Ponmani un veetla sowkiyama
Na inga sowkiyam

Female : Ponmani un veetil sowkiyama
Naan ingu sowkiyame

Male : Unna nenachu paakumbothu kavitha
Manasula aruvi maari kottuthu
Aana atha ezhuthanunu okantha
Antha ezhuthuthan vaartha

Female : Unnai enni paarkaiyil kavithai kottuthu

Male : Athaan

Female : Athai ezhutha ninaikaiyil vaarthai muttuthu

Male : Athae thaan … ah ha … pramaatham
Kavitha kavitha … padi

Female : Kanmani anbodu kaadhalan
Naan ezhuthum kadithamae
Ponmani un veetil sowkiyama
Naan ingu sowkiyamae

Female : Unnai enni paarkaiyil kavithai kottuthu
Athai ezhutha ninaikaiyil vaarthai muttuthu
Oh ho … kanmani anbodu kaadhalan
Naan ezhuthum kadithamae

Male : La la la la la la la la la la …..

Female : Ponmani un veetil sowkiyama
Naan ingu sowkiyamae

Male : La la la la la la la la la la …..

Male : Mmm .. enaku undaana kaayam
Athu thannala aaridum
Athu ennavo theriyala
Enna maayamo theriyala
Enaku onnumae aavarathu illa
Ithayum ezhuthika
Nadula nadula manae thaenae ponmanae
Ithellam potukanum

Male : Itho paaru enaku enna kaayamnalum
En udambu thaangidum
Un udambu thaangumaa
Thaangaathu
Abirami … abirami abirami

Female : Athayum ezhuthanuma

Male : Haan …
Ithu kaadhal
En kaadhal ennanu sollama
Yenga yenga azhugaiyaa varuthu
Aana naa azhuthu en sogam unna thaakidumo
Apdinu nenaikum pothu varra azhuga kooda ninnuduthu
Manithar unarndhukolla ithu manitha kaadhal alla
Athaiyum thaandi punithamanathu

Female : Undaana kaayamengum thannalae aaripona
Maayam enna ponmanae ponmanae
Enna kaayam aana pothum
En meni thaangi kollum
Unthan meni thaangaathu senthaenae

Male : Enthan kaadhal ennavendru sollamal
Yenga yenga azhugai vanthathu
Enthan sogam unnai thaakum
Endrennumbothu vantha azhugai ninrathu
Manithar unarnthu kolla
Ithu manitha kaadhal alla
Athaiyum thaandi punithamanathu

Male : Abiramiyae thaalaatum saamiyae
Naan thaanae theriyuma
Sivagamiyae sivanil neeyum paathiyae
Athuvum unaku puriyuma

Male : Suba laali laaliyae laali laaliyae
Abirami laaliyae laali laaliyae
Abiramiyae thaalaatum samiyae
Naan thaanae theriyuma unaku puriyuma

Female : La la la la la la la la la la …

Male : La la la la la la la la la la …

Female : Lala lala lala la … lala lala lala la

Male : Lala lala lala la … lala lala lala la

Male & Female : …………………………………………………….

 

ExtraIbformation :

About Kamal Hassan :

Born on November 7, 1954, Parthasarathy Srinivasan [4] is better known by his stage name Kamal Haasan. He is an Indian actor, playback singer, lyricist, screenwriter, director, producer, choreographer, television host, social activist, and politician who works in Tamil cinema. He has starred in a few Malayalam, Telugu, Hindi, Kannada, and Bengali films in addition to Tamil ones. In addition to being regarded as one of the best and most esteemed performers in Indian cinema, Haasan is credited with bringing numerous novelties to the Indian film industry.

Numerous honors have been bestowed upon him, including two Filmfare Awards, eighteen Filmfare Awards South, nine Tamil Nadu State Film Awards, four Nandi Awards, one Rashtrapati Award, and four National Film Awards. He received the Padma Bhushan in 1990, the Padma Shri in 1990, and the Kalaimamani Award in 1984 followed in 2016 by the Order of Arts and Letters (Chevalier).

Haasan received a President’s Gold Medal for his work as a young artist in the 1960 Tamil film Kalathur Kannamma. Following a hiatus, he made his breakthrough in the 1975 drama Apoorva Raagangal, which was directed by K. Balachander. In the film, he played a disobedient young man who develops feelings for an older woman, winning him his first Filmfare Award.

His portrayals of a guileless young man who falls in love with a woman who has retrograde amnesia in Moondram Pirai (1982), a common slum dweller who becomes a highly esteemed don in Nayakan (1987), and multiple roles garnered him three National Film Awards for Best Actor.

in Indian (1996). His roles in Sagara Sangamam (1983), Sadma (1983), Saagar (1985), Swathi Muthyam (1986), Pushpaka Vimana (1987), Sathyaa (1988), Apoorva Sagodharargal (1989), and Michael Madana further brought him great praise. Aalavandhan (2001), Chachi 420 (1997), Hey Ram (2000), Virumaandi (2004), Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu (2006), Dasavathaaram (2008), Vishwaroopam (2013), Vikram (2022), Kama Rajan (1990), Gunaa (1991), Thevar Magan (1992), Mahanadhi (1994), Kuruthipunal (1995), and Anbe Sivam (2003). A number of his films have been produced by his production business, Raaj Kamal Films International.

In 2004, Haasan was given the first Abraham Kovoor National Award for his charitable work. He served as the project ambassador for the 2010 Hridayaragam event, which gathered money for a children’s orphanage for those affected by HIV/AIDS. Haasan started a children’s cancer charity in September 2010. fund and donated roses to Sri Ramachandra University’s cancer patients in Porur, Chennai. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi proposed Haasan for the Swachh Bharat Mission. Haasan officially established his political party, Makkal Needhi Maiam (lit. People’s Justice Center), on February 21, 2018.

Childhood and family

On November 7, 1954, Haasan was born into a Tamil Iyengar Brahmin household to homemaker Rajalakshmi and lawyer and independence activist D. Srinivasan . Parthasarathy was Haasan’s original name. Later on, his father renamed him Kamal Haasan. He has also acted, as have his brothers, Chandrahasan (1937–2017) and Charuhasan (1931). Nalini, Haasan’s sister, is a classical dancer who was born in 1946. After completing his elementary schooling in Paramakudi, he relocated to His brothers went to Madras (now Chennai) to further their schooling. Encouraged by his father, Haasan pursued his studies in Santhome, Madras, where he developed an interest in the arts and cinema.

Career in film

Haasan was brought along when his mother’s friend, a doctor, went to A. V. Meiyappan (AVM) to treat his wife. M. Saravanan, the son of AVM, apparently liked his manner and suggested him for their production of Kalathur Kannamma. At the age of six, Haasan starred in Kalathur Kannamma, which earned him the Rashtrapati Award (President’s gold award).

He went on to star in five more films during his childhood. In 1962, he made his Malayalam film debut with Kannum Karalum. He joined a repertory company at his father’s advice T. K. Shanmugam is in charge. He pursued his studies at the Hindu Higher Secondary School in Triplicane in the meantime. Haasan’s passion in cosmetics and his skill were influenced by his time with the theater group.

Haasan rejoined the film industry as a dance assistant, working as an apprentice for choreographer Thankappan, following a seven-year break. Haasan made a few cameos during this period, including a couple uncredited parts. He made his first appearance in a dance number in the 1970 movie Maanavan. He then worked with Thankappan on movies like Kasi Yathirai (1973) and Annai Velankani (1971). He served as an assistant director and played a supporting part in the former.

Arangetram, a 1973 Tamil film directed by K. Balachander. He was portrayed by Balachander as the antagonist in his 1973 novel Sollathaan Ninaikkiren. Later, Haasan starred in supporting parts in movies like Naan Avanillai, Aval Oru Thodar Kathai, and Gumasthavin Magal (1974). He received his first Filmfare Award for his performance in Kanyakumari, a Malayalam film, in the same year. He made his breakthrough in Tamil film as the lead in Apoorva Raagangal, directed by Balachander. He portrayed a disobedient young man who develops feelings for an elderly woman. Haasan learned how to play the mridangam for this role. He received his second Filmfare Award for the role.

Balachander’s Manmadha Leelai, in which Haasan starred, was followed by Oru Oodhappu Kan Simittugiradhu (directed S. P. Muthuraman’s third Filmfare Award for the film. Later, Haasan starred in Moondru Mudichu, a Balachander play. Avargal (1977) studied ventriloquism for his position in the women’s movement. Haasan reprised his role in the Telugu remake, Idi Katha Kaadu (1979). 16 His performance as a rustic bumpkin in Vayathinile earned him Best Actor for the fourth time in a row.

Haasan featured in Kokila, his first Kannada film, which was directed by friend and mentor Balu Mahendra in 1977. He also starred in Kabita, a Bengali movie that year that was a remake of Aval Oru Thodar Kathai, a Tamil movie. Haasan debuted in Telugu cinema in 1978, playing the lead in the intercultural romance Maro Charitra, which was helmed by Balachander. He played a psychopathic sexual killer in the movie Sigappu Rojakkal, which earned him his sixth consecutive Filmfare Award.

He received his sixth Filmfare Award for his role in the Malayalam movie Eeta. His debut role was opposite Sridevi in P.G. Viswambharan’s 1977 Malayalam film Satyavan Savithri; this pairing was later praised and well appreciated. Haasan portrayed two characters in the Telugu movie Sommokadidi Sokokadidi (1979). It was also his first time working with Singeetam Srinivasa Rao, the director. He starred in the snake-horror movie Neeya, the musical Ninaithale Inikkum, and Kalyanaraman. He won six regional Best Actor Filmfare Awards during the end of the 1970s, including four Best Tamil Actor Awards in a row.[Reference required]

Among Haasan’s productions in the 1980s were 1980 in Tamil Varumayin Niram Sivappu, who won the first Telugu Filmfare Award for his portrayal of a jobless youth in Aakali Rajyam, was also filmed in Telugu. He starred in the drama films Guru, Maria My Darling, and Ullasa Paravaigal in 1980. Ek Duuje Ke Liye (1981), a remake of his own Telugu-language film Maro Charitra, which was directed by K. Balachander and garnered him his first Filmfare Hindi-language nomination, marked Haasan’s Hindi film debut.

In 1981, he appeared in his 100th movie, Raja Paarvai, when he made his producing debut. He won a Filmfare Award for his performance as a blind session violinist, despite the movie’s very weak box office success. Following a year of appearing in commercials, Haasan was awarded the first of three National Awards for Best Actor for his performance in Balu Mahendra’s Moondram Pirai as a schoolteacher tending to a patient suffering from amnesia.

He later reprised the role in Sadma, the Hindi adaptation. He concentrated on Bollywood adaptations of his Tamil films during this time, such as Zara Si Zindagi and Yeh To Kamaal Ho Gaya. He starred in K. Viswanath’s Sagara Sangamam in 1983. He received his second Filmfare Best Telugu Actor Award and his first Nandi Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of an alcoholic classical dancer.

About S. Janaki :

Sistla Janaki is an Indian playback vocalist and sporadic music composer from Andhra Pradesh who was born on April 23, 1938. She is commonly known as South India’s Nightingale and Janaki Amma. She is among India’s most well-known playback singers. This includes solos, duets, choruses, and title tracks in 20 languages, including Kannada, Malayalam, Telugu, Tamil, Hindi, Sanskrit, Odia, Tulu, Urdu, Punjabi, Badaga, Bengali, and Konkani, as well as in foreign languages like English, Japanese, German, and Sinhala. She has recorded over 48,000 songs for movies, albums, TV shows, and radio.

S. Janaki earned honorific titles like the for her contributions to the Indian music industry over the course of a six-decade career “Queen of Melody” , “Nightingale of India” , and the “Expression Queen of Indian music” .In 1957, she made her singing debut in the Tamil film Vidhiyin Vilayattu, and that same year, she recorded in six other languages. Before announcing her self-retirement from performing on stage and in movies in 2016, she had a career spanning more than 60 years. But in 2018, at the behest of the film industry, she returned with a song for the Tamil movie Pannaadi.

She has received 33 separate State Film Awards in addition to 4 National Film Awards. She has received the Karnataka Rajyotsava award from the Karnataka government, the Kalaimamani award from the Tamil Nadu State Government, and an honorary doctorate from the University of Mysore. She turned down Padma Bhushan in 2013, the third-highest civilian award from the Indian government and stated that she is deserving of the Bharat Ratna, the country’s highest civilian honor, for her contributions to music. She emphasized that South Indian artists were not given the credit they deserved and that it was “too late” and insufficient.

Childhood and family

Pallapatla, Repalle Taluka, Guntur, Madras Presidency, British India (now Andhra Pradesh) is where Janaki was born on April 23. Sreeramamurthy Sistla, her father, was an Ayurvedic physician and educator. The majority of her early years were spent in Sircilla, where, at the age of nine, she was given her first theatrical performance opportunity. She received instruction in the fundamentals of music from a Nadaswaram vidwan Paidiswamy. She never went after any official instruction in classical music.

In 1959, Janaki wed V. Ramprasad. He supported her career and was with her for the most of her recordings. He passed away from cardiac arrest in 1997. Janaki speaks and writes Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, and Hindi with ease. Her mother tongue is Telugu.

Career

On her uncle’s recommendation, Janaki relocated to Chennai in her twenties to work as a singer at AVM Studios with music composer R. Sudarsanam. In 1957, she made her debut as a playback vocalist in the Tamil film Vidhiyin Vilayattu. She later starred in the Telugu movie M.L.A. In her first year, she sang movie songs in six different languages.

She selected As the final song of her 60-year singing career, she sang the Malayalam lullaby “Amma Poovinum” from 10 Kalpanakal. She announced her retirement on October 28, 2017, at a concert in Mysuru. The majority of S Janaki’s songs are in Kannada. Her duets and solos with Dr. Rajkumar, S. P. Balasubrahmanyam, and P B Srinivas are regarded as timeless.

In 1957, Janaki performed her first Kannada song. She had begun collaborating with numerous well-known music composers by the early 1960s. She continued to be the most popular female playback vocalist in Kannada movies during the 1970s and 1980s. She received the majority of the top compositions from the music directors, including Hamsalekha, Rajan-Nagendra, and G. K. Venkatesh.

The number of duets she has performed with P B Srinivas and S P Dr. Rajkumar and Balasubrahmanyam. In 2014, she received the Karnataka Rajyotsava award. Because of her services to Kannada music and film, she received an honorary doctorate from the University of Mysore.

About Ilayaraja :

An Indian musician, composer, arranger, conductor, orchestrator, multi-instrumentalist, lyricist, and playback vocalist, Ilaiyaraaja was born Gnanathesigan on June 3, 1943. He is well-known for his contributions to Indian cinema, primarily in Tamil, but also in Telugu, Hindi, Malayalam, and Kannada films.

In a career spanning more than 48 years, he is regarded as one of the most prolific composers, having composed more than 7,000 songs, composed film scores for more than 1,000 films, and performed in more than 20,000 performances. Often referred to as “Isaignani” (the musical sage), he was given the title “Maestro” by the London-based Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

Additionally, Ilaiyaraaja was among the first Indian cinema composers to use string arrangements and Western classical music harmonies into Indian film music , and the first A complete symphony composed by a South Asian. He was the first Indian composer to use a computer to make a soundtrack for the movie Vikram in 1986. In addition, he wrote the first Indian oratorio, Thiruvasagam in Symphony (2006).

He received 49% of the vote in a 2013 CNN-IBN survey honoring 100 years of Indian film, making him the nation’s greatest music composer. He was ranked ninth on the list of the top 25 film composers in cinema history by the American global film portal “Taste of Cinema” in 2014. Alongside Jerry Goldsmith, John Williams, and Ennio Morricone, he is the only Indian on the list.

Throughout his career, Ilaiyaraaja won numerous accolades for his contributions. 2012, due to his imaginative and He was honored with the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, the highest honor bestowed upon performers in India, for his innovative musical works. He received the Padma Bhushan, India’s third-highest civilian honor, in 2010 and the Padma Vibhushan, India’s second-highest civilian award, in 2018. Since July 2022, he has been a nominated member of the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Indian parliament. On March 20, 2024, it was revealed that “Ilaiyaraaja” will be a biographical film on his life.

Childhood

On June 3, 1943, Ilaiyaraaja was born as Gnanathesigan into a Dalit family in Pannaipuram, which is located in the current Theni district of Tamil Nadu, India. a sense of belonging  His father changed his name from Gnanathesigan when he started school.

“Rajaiya” and was referred to as “Raasayya” by the neighbors. His name was changed to “Raaja” by Dhanraj Master when he enrolled him as a student to learn musical instruments. The prefix “Ilaiya” (which means “younger” in Tamil) was added to the name “Raaja” while he was working on his first movie, Annakili (1976). This resulted in him being renamed “Ilaiyaraaja” because another well-known music director from the 1970s had the same suffix, A. M. Rajah.

Since Ilaiyaraaja and politician M. Karunanidhi have the same birthday (3 June), Ilaiyaraaja chose to celebrate his on June 2nd, allowing Tamil Nadu residents to celebrate Karunanidhi’s birthday only on June 3rd. This was carried out in recognition of Ilaiyaraaja was given the title “Isaignani” by Karunanidhi.

Growing up in a rural location, Ilaiyaraaja was exposed to a variety of Tamil traditional music during his early years. He spent the following ten years performing all throughout South India after joining the traveling musical group “Pavalar Brothers” at the age of fourteen, which was led by his older brother Pavalar Varadharajan. His debut piece, a musical adaptation of an elegy written by Tamil poet laureate Kannadasan for India’s first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, was written while he was a member of the company.

He enrolled in Professor Dhanraj’s music class in Madras (now Chennai) in 1968. An introduction to Western classical music, composing instruction in counterpoint and other techniques, and study when playing an instrument. After finishing the course via a distance learning channel from Trinity College of Music, London, Ilaiyaraaja was awarded a gold medal in classical guitar. His teacher, T. V. Gopalakrishnan, taught him Carnatic music.

Career

Ilaiyaraaja played guitar in a band-for-hire in Chennai in the 1970s. She also worked as an organist, keyboardist, and session guitarist for West Bengali filmmakers and film music composers like Salil Chowdhury. The statement “[Ilaiyaraaja] is going to become the best composer in India” was made by Chowdhury once. “Our main guitarist in Madras is the best composer in India” , he stated. He worked on 200 film projects, largely in Kannada cinema, after being employed as G. K. Venkatesh’s musical assistant. Ilaiyaraaja, Venkatesh’s helper, would plan the

Venkatesh created the melodic outlines, and with his help, I learned how to compose. Ilaiyaraaja also started composing his own music during this time. He used to convince Venkatesh’s session musicians to perform snippets of his scores in their free time so they could hear his compositions.

Composer of film scores

Ilaiyaraaja at the Press Conference for the TFPC
He spent a lot of time learning, but at the beginning of his career, Ilaiyaraaja’s musical taste was completely different from the film music being produced at the time, so he “wasn’t able to grasp how music was being made for films.” But in 1975, after being captivated by a song that Ilaiyaraaja was singing casually, film producer Panchu Arunachalam hired him to do the music and score for a Tamil movie.

“Annakili” (1976). Ilaiyaraaja created a blend of Tamil and Western idioms for the soundtrack by combining modern popular film music orchestration techniques with Tamil folk poetry and song melodies. At first, he was a little worried about the reception of his work, fearing that musicians in the field would disregard him. The track was a big smash when Annakili came out in 1976. Ilaiyaraaja drew inspiration from modern film music for his next twelve films. Later, as a new generation of movies began to appear, they made room for the type of music he was interested in.

The Indian cinema score landscape was revitalized by Ilaiyaraaja’s incorporation of Tamil folk music into his compositions. By the He began to rise in prominence as a composer and music director in the South Indian cinema industry in the middle of the 1980s.[39] Kannadasan, Vaali, Vairamuthu, O. N. V. Kurup, Sreekumaran Thampi, Veturi, Acharya Aatreya, Sirivennela Seetharama Sastry, Chi. Udayashankar, and Gulzar were among the Indian poets and lyricists he collaborated with. K. S. Chithra, S. Janaki, and S. P. Balasubrahmanyam sang the majority of his works.

 

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FAQ’S :

S. Janaki earned the title for her melodious voice and extraordinary contributions to playback singing across several Indian languages, recording over 48,000 songs in her six-decade career.

Ilaiyaraaja was among the first Indian composers to integrate Western classical music harmonies and orchestration into Indian film music. He also introduced the use of computerized soundtracks and composed the first Indian symphony.

Kamal Haasan’s iconic films include Moondram Pirai, Nayakan, Thevar Magan, Indian, Dasavathaaram, and Vikram, showcasing his acting range and mastery of diverse roles.

S. Janaki has won four National Film Awards, 33 State Film Awards, the Kalaimamani Award, and an honorary doctorate from the University of Mysore, among other accolades.

Ilaiyaraaja's music is distinguished by its fusion of Tamil folk melodies with Western classical elements, his innovative orchestration, and his ability to evoke deep emotions in listeners.

Kamal Haasan has been actively involved in social work, advocating for cleanliness under the Swachh Bharat Mission, supporting HIV/AIDS-affected children, and founding the political party Makkal Needhi Maiam for social justice.

S. Janaki declined the Padma Bhushan in 2013, stating she deserved a higher honor like the Bharat Ratna for her significant contributions to Indian music and pointing out the delayed recognition of South Indian artists.

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