What's new

‘Nonsense song’ gets lots of attention in India

Hehe pretty epic song.

Other Tamil Song Naka Muka is quite famous too. They play in Sydney clubs all the time:lol:
 
. . . .
Why This Kolaveri Di is a song from the upcoming Tamil movie 3, due to be released in 2012, composed by Anirudh Ravichander. The song is penned and sung by popular Tamil movie star Dhanush. A promo of this song was released on YouTube on 16th November 2011, and it instantly became viral on social networking sites for its quirky "Tanglish" (Tamil–English) lyrics.

Soon, the song became the most searched video in YouTube.

This song becomes the first Tamil film song to premiere on a national music channel, MTV .
 
. .
Just when you thought Indian pop culture can't get any more dumber. I used to think South Indian cinema was slightly better than than the excrement bollywood squeezes out.
 
. .
Banglapride,this is a local slang for dumped out boys.Just a sarcastic,self depreciatory song,you dont know the context and the local slang.

Infact,this was a song purely made only for Chennai middle class street guys,not for anyone else.

Dont judge stuff randomly.
 
. . . .
Viral: ‘Nonsense song’ gets lots of laughs in India
Viral:

What was the No. 2 meme of the week?

No. 1 being, of course, officer John Pike. He is now better known as the Pepper Spray Cop, immortalized as he pepper-sprayed the faces of seated students on University of California Davis campus. The photos sparked a national outcry this week and were digitally remixed into hundreds of images.

Far away from the conflict at UC Davis campus, meanwhile, was a music video performed in “Tamglish” — a vibrant dialect that mixes Tamil and English — that kicked up a comedy ruckus in India.

The song is called “Kolaveri Di” (Killer Rage), from the upcoming Tamil movie 3 (the Tamil film industry is one of the biggest in the world). And among South Indian users of social networking sites, the “nonsense song” was all anyone could talk about.

Tamil actor Dhanush warbled lyrics he made up on the spot for the four-minute tune, which had received nearly three and a half million hits on YouTube by Thursday. The lyrics, he told an Indian newspaper, are about a drunk man who has been dumped by his girlfriend, has “no grammar” — and shouldn’t be taken seriously.

“It’s meant to be fun,” he said. “You should not attach too much importance to it,” he told the Times of India.

As an effective promo for his new movie, directed by his wife, the song is serious indeed.
 
.
yes this song became very popular, but its completely rubbish
 
. .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom