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KADHALE KADHALE LYRICS 96 MOVIE
Kadhale kadhale (காதலே காதலே) song is from the movie Indru netru naalai, a science fiction comedy film in Tamil-language that features Vishnu Vishal and Miya as the main leads. Released by Think Music on 12th June 2015, this Tamil song runs for 3 minutes and 27 seconds. The myriad songs that engulf your mind right now as you read these words stand proof of what art can add to our lives.Want to revamp your Tamil movie songs playlist? You cannot afford to miss Kadhale kadhale song. Has this happened to you with songs, where the lyrics speak to you and the tunesw makes you sway? I know your answer. That’s how much music the last week gave me - between Kadhaley Kadhaley and Inkem Inkem Inkem Kavaley, which translates to, ‘What more do I need?’ with the second line, ‘Chaale idhi chaale’ meaning, ‘This (love) is more than enough’. To have a 2018 Telugu song hark back to a 1981 Tamil composition, is heartening to hear.Īnd it goes without saying that anything Sid Sriram sings is an immediate iTunes purchase for me. The Anandha Bhairavi lifts the chorus which reminded me (and I’m sure it reminded anyone who’s heard it) of the famous Malaysia Vasudevan number from Kozhi Koovudhu tuned by Ilaiyaraaja - Poovey ilaya poovey - which remains an evergreen hit. The opening swing of the first line, “Inkem inkem inkem kavaley”, goes up, and further up, before coming back to settle mid-ground and lilting its way back and forth, like a swing. I first heard it when it was shared by a cinematographer friend. The lyric video has already clocked in 30 million views so I’m not going to squander column space in introducing the song to you.
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Seldom has a new song captured me by my gut and put me on a spin like this! If a film song does so much within me, it’s always by an MSV, Ilaiyaraaja or AR Rahman.Īnother recent song that held me to ransom is a Telugu number, sung by my current favourite singer, Sid Sriram, for the film, Geetha Govindam. Something about the way the lines fall into the lower notes and settle down like sand on a river bed while the still waters of the melody run deeply, silently, makes my heart swell up with an emotion I didn’t realise had existed inside of me. The charanam of ‘Kadhale Kadhale’ has the flourish of a symphony as the instruments blend with the female voice and sends us into an eclectic high: Kadhaley kadhaley, Thaniperumthunaiye, Koodavaa koodavaa Podhum podhum.Įach time the Koodavaa line plays, my eyes well up. The teaser stayed on for other reasons too: The shots of the hero as a photographer, the heroine’s yellow salwar and smile, the shot of their hands on the metro rail pole, as if they were holding on to the pole to balance their aura. The chorus had lingered from when I saw the teaser of the film to which this song belongs: 96, starring Vijay Sethupathi and Trisha Krishnan.
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Tuned and penned by names I hadn’t heard before (music composer Govinda Vasantha, who I later came to know is the founder of my favourite band, Thaikkudam Bridge, & lyricist Krishna Netha), the only recognisable contribution in the song, when I heard it for the first time, was Chinmayi’s mellifluous voice. There was no looking back thereafter! The whole song became a beautiful waltz in my head. The line reminded me of my favourite Tamil poet Bharathi - the way this phrase acts as the last line of the stanza (the whole song is like a sonnet) and lingers on the word kadhaladi had the “dhwani” (sound) of my Mahakavi’s affinity to love. Add to that a haunting hum that buzzes through the melody and I went, “What is this new noise in the pretext of a love song?” But when the song settles on “Kaanbadhellaam kaadhaladi”, I got hooked. I always get skeptical when words like pooranam and panjavarna bhootham peep out of a film song.