"Satyameva Jayathe" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by SuperHeavy | ||||
from the album SuperHeavy | ||||
Released | August 9, 2011 | |||
Format | Digital download | |||
Genre | Indian pop, Rock, Alternative rock | |||
Length | 4:07 | |||
Label | A&M | |||
Writer(s) | A. R. Rahman, Damian Marley, Joss Stone | |||
SuperHeavy singles chronology | ||||
|
"Satyameva Jayathe" is a song by the rock supergroup SuperHeavy from their eponymous debut album (2011). It is a Sanskrit-language song performed by A. R. Rahman and Mick Jagger, released on 9 August 2011 as the album's second single.[1]
Contents |
"Satyameva Jayathe" is named after the national motto of India, which literally translates as "Truth Alone Triumphs". Rahman revealed that his long dream was "to take one of the morals of Indian culture which is 'Satyameva Jayathe' and make it as a song."[2] Also, Dave Stewart and Mick Jagger's mutual liking for Indian orchestrations resulted in adding Rahman to the supergroup.[3]
"Satyameva Jayathe" was released as the second single from the album on 9 August 2011, a week before India's Independence Day on 15 August. The single is written and composed by Rahman, also features Jagger singing in Sanskrit.[4][5] The song premiered exclusively on Radio Mirchi 98.3 FM on 9 August across twenty-two Indian cities, and Tata DoCoMo simultaneously promoted the song and the album on mass media.[6]
On release, distinguished Hindu statesman Rajan Zed in a statement in Nevada, welcomed and appreciated Jagger and his group for experimenting in Sanskrit, also urging other popular singers and groups to record in Sanskrit.[7]
SuperHeavy is reportedly involved in selecting the videos which would make the cut. However, VH1 India asked Indians to shoot and send in videos of their interpretations of the word truth (or satya). The best videos was selected and stringed together to create a video for the song. According to VH1 India, they received in all 500 entries and selected a video where a soldier drops his gun and picks up a guitar, and another featured a tale told through the eyes of a child.[8]
|