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Mankatha Background Theme Music Download: Listen to the Thrilling Soundtrack by Yuvan Shankar Raja



do any body knew the difference inspiration and copy..this managatha theme is such a blatant copy.i dunno why anyone are supporting that.what hardwork has yuvan done in this.he just plays the pre programmed loop alreay used by 50 cents.did he improvise any?if you want to talk about inspiration just c this what raaja has done and used the same in the prelude of antha nilavathan song from mudhal mariyadhai..if you have proper musical sense find out the portion in which he got inspired from. =qN2mv8739SU




Mankatha Background Theme Music Download




@anonymous i saw it on one of the websites where they had mentioned that...well if you wanna debate about plagiarism then it does not stop with Yuvan alone...the Oscar winner ARR is a big copycat...people praise him even if he farts....and about the mankatha theme yeah the beats r the same, but there is improvisation on it....if u had some musical sense you would definitely understand that....and btw i am a gr8 fan of raja sir and also yuvan....Raja sir is a legend...


Could you please post the background music played on two occasions (during pre-climax fight between Ajith and Arjun). 1. When Ajith is about to kill Lakshmi Rai2. The scene when Arjun's party arrives at the scene and Thala is sitting in Van with money flying all over him. I cant get over it !!! Has it been plagiarized too ? please let me know.And great work Suresh, will keep coming to your blog on BGM reviews. This is awesome ...


In mid-October 2010, during Navratri, Yuvan Shankar Raja started composing the first tunes for the film.[7][8] The "introduction song" of Ajith Kumar, "Vilaiyaadu Mankatha", for which he had taken "special care",[9] and the item number song "Machi Open The Bottle...", labelled as a "mass song",[4] were recorded first. In March 2011, sources claimed that a song titled "Vaada Bin Lada" was recorded with Krish and Suchitra,[10] which was called a "funky techno duet" and referred to as the "present day version" of the song "Sorgame Endralum",[4] while Yuvan Shankar Raja described it as a "futuristic duet".[11] The song's basic tune was based on the Carnatic raaga Madhuvanti.[12] Later that month, Venkat Prabhu made an announcement via Twitter, disclosing that the soundtrack album would consist of nine tracks, including one promotional track, one theme music track and one club mix, further adding that six songs had been composed and three out of them recorded already.[13][14] The remaining songs were recorded from mid-June only,[15] with Yuvan Shankar Raja informing the following month, that he had scrapped one of the songs, since he was not satisfied with its tune, and composed a new song, starting from scratch.[16]


Reports in July 2011 revealed that the album would feature two more duets; "Nee Naan", which was sung by S. P. B. Charan and Yuvan Shankar Raja's sister, Bhavatharini,[17] while Madhushree and Yuvan Shankar himself had sung the other one titled "Nanbane".[4] The song "Nee Naan" was revealed to be the replacement for the scrapped song, which Yuvan Shankar Raja had composed within ten minutes of time,[11] with the composer going to pick that song as his favorite from the album.[18] Karthik and Vijay Yesudas had performed another song in the album, titled "Balle Lakka", which also features vocals of Anusha Dhayanidhi, wife of producer Dayanidhi Azhagiri, debuting as a playback singer.[19] She was persuaded into playback singing by Venkat Prabhu who had seen her performing on her wedding reception and was impressed by her voice.[20][21] The planned promotional track was excluded from the album in last minute.[22] Earlier reports suggesting that one of the song would feature Yuvan Shankar along with his father Ilaiyaraaja's vocals, and that Andrea Jeremiah had sung another song,[23] turned out to be false. Further Venkat Prabhu disclosed that S. P. Balasubrahmanyam and Shankar Mahadevan were approached to render one number in vain, with the former declining, explaining that the song was too high-pitched for his voice, and the latter being unavailable.[24] The "Machi Open The Bottle..." song and the club mix of "Vilaiyaadu Mankatha" were notably orchestrated by Venkat Prabhu's brother Premji Amaran.[25] The theme music was revealed to be inspired from a song by 50 Cent, with Prabhu and Yuvan Shankar adding that due credits had been given in the film.[11] 2ff7e9595c


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