Chaiyya Chaiyya

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“Chaiyya Chaiyya”
Song by A. R. Rahman
Album Dil Se
Released 1998
Recorded Panchathan Record Inn
Genre Film score
Length 6:48
Label Venus Records and Tapes
Writer A. R. Rahman, Gulzar
Producer A. R. Rahman
Dil Se track listing
)
N/A Chaiyya Chaiyya
(1)
"Jiya Chale"
(2
Audio sample
Info (help·info)


"Chaiyya Chaiyya" (Hindi: चैंय्या चैंय्या, Urdu: چیّا چیّا, "[walk] in the shadow") is the first song in the famous Hindi film Dil Se directed by Mani Ratnam. The song was composed by film composer A. R. Rahman. It became popular quickly upon release and its music video gained the same status, partly because it was filmed on a moving train. The song was called Thaiyya Thaiyya in the Tamil version of the film. In 2003, ‏BBC World Service conducted an international poll to choose ten most famous songs of all time. Around 7000 songs were selected from all over the world. According to BBC, people from 155 countries/island voted. Chaiyya Chaiyya was nine in top 10 songs.[1]


Contents

[edit] About the song

"Chaiyya Chaiyya" not only reached the charts in India, but also became popular in England. The song is sung by Sukhwinder Singh and Sapna Awasthi, with lyrics by Gulzar.

It is also featured in the opening of the second act of the musical Bombay Dreams, in which the train sequence from Dil Se is recreated on stage. Remixes of the song were used in the opening and closing credits of the 2006 film, Inside Man, directed by Spike Lee and produced by Brian Grazer. The opening credits have the original version by A.R. Rahman with additional trumpet accompaniment and the closing credits feature a hip-hop-inflected remix featuring Punjabi MC (Chaiyya Chaiyya Bollywood Joint).

The song was also featured in the pilot episode of the television show Smith. A cover of this song was performed in episode 5 of season 5 of CSI: Miami.

[edit] Music video

Chaiyya Chaiyya's music video
Chaiyya Chaiyya's music video

The video was filmed on top of the Ooty train in mountainous southern India while actor Shahrukh Khan dances with model/ actress Malaika Arora and other dancers. The cinematography of the film was handled by Santosh Sivan.

The choreography by Farah Khan is considered among the most difficult ever done; a few dancers sustained minor injuries.[citation needed]

The rhythmic gyrations and seductive clapping that are prominent throughout the video caused a momentous dance to be created that is known as "The Bombay Clap". The dance is extremely popular in the southern cities of India.

[edit] Lyrics

Composer A R Rahman has declared that "Chaiyya Chaiyya" is "a Sufi song".[2] Its lyrics are notable for their use of religious (especially Islamic) metaphors to characterize love, including references to heaven, the Shahadah (Muslim declaration of faith), and a verse from the Quran.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Worlds Top Ten — BBC World Service
  2. ^ Interview with Rediff.com, March 2000 [1]

[edit] Links