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Hosanna (A. R. Rahman song)

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"Hosanna"
Song by Anbumani M featuring Sushmitha, Anbumani, Blaaze, Leon
from the album Ekk Deewana Tha, Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa and Ye Maaya Chesave
Released6 January 2010
RecordedPanchathan Record Inn and AM Studios, Chennai, India
GenreFilmi
Length5:30
LabelSony Music
Songwriter(s)A. R. Rahman (composer), Anantha Sreeram (Telugu lyrics), Thamarai (Tamil lyrics), Javed Akhtar (Hindi lyrics), Blaaze (Rap lyrics)
Producer(s)A. R. Rahman

"Hosanna/Hosaanaa" is a Tamil/Telugu/Hindi song from the 2010 Tamil film Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa,Telugu film Ye Maaya Chesave and 2012 Hindi film Ekk Deewana Tha composed by A. R. Rahman, sung by Vijay Prakash and Suzanne D'Mello featuring Tamil lyrics by Thamarai, and the rap portion in all versions by Blaaze. The song features additional vocals by Vivek Agarwal, Dr. Narayan, V. V. Prasanna and Haricharan and chorus by K. M. Music Conservatory. In the 2012 Hindi remake of the film, Ekk Deewana Tha the song was written by Javed Akhtar sung by Leon D'Souza and Maria Roe Vincent and the interlude Hosanna humming by Suzanne D'Mello. The song became very popular in all versions and was #1 in the year end music charts of 2010.[1]

Background

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The song is woven around the word Hosanna which is considered sacred and used in liturgy by Jews and Christians. The word is a shout of adoration and literally means save now. In the movie, it is a soulful romantic song which express the joy in the heart and soul of a guy who comes across his beloved. The song has rap interludes in between by Blaaze.

The song in Tamil and Telugu starts slowly with lyrics Ee Hrudayam/Yen Idhayam, which resembles the biblical verses "If someone slaps you on one cheek, let him slap the other too!", (But in Hindi it uses a She'r "Dil hote jo mere seene mein do Doosra dil bhi main tumhe deta todne ko" which means "If there were two hearts in my chest I'd give you the second heart as well to break it.." having almost similar meaning in context of Love ) but soon gain its pace with the lines starting Entha Mandhi/Andha Neram, (But in Hindi it uses a She'r "Dilkash thi woh shaam pehle pehal Jab tumse mili thi nazar" which means "that evening was lovely when for the first time my eyes met yours.." The Tamil lyrics were written by director Gautham Vasudev Menon's usual associate Thamarai and the Telugu lyrics were written by Anantha Sreeram, whilst the lyrics for the rap portion were written by the Blaaze. It was the composer itself, who suggested to include the word Hosanna, as the heroine hails from a Christian family and to include the portion Ee Hrudayam/Yen Idhayam.

Singer Vijay Prakash is the main vocalist, who sung the male portion completely except for the rap portion starting Everybody Wanna. While Suzanne with her excellent singing, culminates in a humming of the word Hosanna. and also singer Leon D'Souza who is singing that song in the Hindi film.

Production

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The song is picturised when the protagonist of the film Karthik/Sachin (In the Hindi remake of the film) (Silambarasan/Naga Chaitanya/Prateik Babbar) comes across his beloved Jessie (Trisha Krishnan/Samantha Ruth Prabhu/Amy Jackson) for the very first time. The choreography was done by Flexy Stu. The song was picturised in United States for the Telugu version, Malta for the Tamil version, and in India for the Hindi remake with an interesting dance sequence by Naga Chaitanya, Silambarasan and Pratiek Babbar in these respective films. Its Tamil version crosses 19million views and Hindi version crosses 58million views on YouTube. It was sung in those movies - Leon D'Souza, Ekk Deewana Tha, and Vijay Prakash, Blaaze (rap lyrics) from the 2010 Tamil-Telugu bilingual film, Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa / Ye Maaya Chesave.

Controversies

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Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa was one of the most anticipated soundtracks as it was Rahman's first album he composed after his double Oscars win. Following this anticipation, the track was leaked on to the internet before the official audio releases. Later the track was officially released with the same singer but another strophe had been added to the song. A thirty-second video of the song was also released later.

In 2012, members of an organization called Christian Secular Forum (CSF) objected to the song, claiming that "Hosanna" is a sacred word. They demanded removal of the word from the song, and an apology.[2]

Reception

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"Hosanna" created waves among the music lovers even before the audio release of the film. It had another grand reception when its video was released onto television channels on 11 March. The song was the most promoted song of the film and it became very popular.[3] The song was #1 in the year end music charts of 2010, published by Sify.[1] The song is regarded as a classic by fans of the film and A.R.Rahman

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Top 10 songs of 2010". Sify. 25 December 2010. Archived from the original on 1 January 2011. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  2. ^ "Christian community hurt by AR Rahman's Hosanna?". Dainik Bhaskar. 17 January 2012. Retrieved 17 January 2012.
  3. ^ "From Jai Ho to Hosanna - Rediff.com Movies". Movies.rediff.com. 22 April 2010. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
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