Hosanna (song)

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"Hosanna"
Song by A. R. Rahman (composer), Vijay Prakash, Suzanne, Blaaze (singers)
Released January 12, 2010
Format CD single, Digital download
Recorded Panchathan Record Inn and AM Studios, Chennai, India
Genre Filmi
Length 5:30
Label Sony Music
Writer A. R. Rahman (composer), Anantha Sreeram (Telugu lyrics), Thamarai (Tamil lyrics), Blaaze (Rap lyrics)
Producer A. R. Rahman
Chronology

"Swaasye"
(3)
"Hosanna"
(3)
"Aakaasam"
(5)

"Ee Hrudayam/Hosanna" is a Telugu/Tamil song from the 2010 Telugu film Ye Maaya Chesave and Tamil film Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa composed by Academy Award winner A. R. Rahman, sung by Vijay Prakash & Suzanne D'Mello featuring Tamil lyrics by Thamarai, and Telugu lyrics by Anantha Sreeram, and the rap portion in both versions by Blaaze. The song features additional vocals by Vivek Agarwal, Dr. Narayan, V. V. Prasanna and Haricharan Sesh and chorus by K. M. Music Conservatory. The song was reused in the Hindi remake of the film, Ekk Deewana Tha with lyrics by Javed Akhtar. The song became very popular and was #1 in the year end music charts of 2010.[1]

About the song

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 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 soon gain its pace with the lines starting Entha Mandhi/Andha Neram. The Tamil lyrics were written by director Gautham 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.

Bollywood 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.


Music video and picturisation

Simbu dancing in the music video for "Hosanna".

The song is picturised when the protagonist of the film Karthik (Silambarasan / Naga Chaitanya) comes across his beloved Jessie (Trisha Krishnan / Samantha Ruth Prabhu) for the very first time. The choreography was done by Flexi Stu. The song was picturised in Malta with an interesting dance sequence by Silambarasan and Naga Chaitanya in respective films.

Controversies

Ye Maaya Chesave is one of Rahman's most remarkable and successful Telugu soundtracks and was one of the most anticipated soundtracks as it was the first album composed by A. R. Rahman after his double Oscars win. Rahman won his first filmfare award in Telugu due to the success of the soundtrack. Following this anticipation, before the official audio release of the Tamil version, on 19 December 2009 in London and 12 January 2010 in Chennai, and the Telugu version on 3 February 2010, Ee Hrudayam/Hosanna track was leaked onto the internet. 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

"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 10 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 on the number of times the songs have been played on FM channels, digital downloads and physical sales of the audio.[1]

Professional reviews

  • Indiaglitz:"The brilliant composer in A R Rahman has woven a lovable song around the word Hosanna (considered auspicious by Christians). With rap interludes in between by Blaaze, the song sticks to hearts instantly. Anantha Sreeram's lyrics describes the joy in the heart and soul of a guy who comes across his beloved. A soulful romantic number, the song with Suzanne chipping in with her best is the USP of the album."
  • Behindwoods:"Christian tradition defines Hosanna as the cry of adoration of the Messiahship of Jesus on his entry into Jerusalem’. Rahman has boldly adopted it to express the joy that erupts in the heart of the hero when his soul mate walks into his life. This lovely number, a mix of a few genres, is richly layered with violin, flute and many other instruments and conceived very differently too. We hear bits of Mohanam and Natabairavi notes all along. Could rock the charts."
  • Lordofthewebs:"This has to be the most popular song of the album. Amazing music, singing and lyrics combine to create this masterpiece that is bound to be wildly popular with the crowd. What begins as a melody with soothing music and soulful female chorus parts transitions beautifully into rap and then back to melody. Vijay Prakash has beautifully captured the mood of the song . Suzanne, with her excellent singing culminating in a mesmerizing humming has made the song better, if that is even possible. Blaaze is good with what he does, as usual."
  • Radioandmusic:"This track is bound to have a mass appeal with its contemporary arrangements and rap portions rendered by Blaaze. Vijay Prakash is at his best and the track starts on a melodious note with Prakash, enters the rap- hip hop mode with Blaaze and Prakash again brings back the melody bit. Suzzane D’Mello’s humming in the background makes the song even more likable."
  • Rediff:"On a half romantic, half mournful note, with a flute interlude begins possibly the most publicized number of the album: Hosanna by Blaaze, Vijay Prakash and Suzanne. The musical arrangement somehow takes you right back to the early days of ARR until you realize which number the refrain, Hosanna, bears a striking resemblance to: Only Time, by Enya. The rap segment closely follows the tune as well; the lyrics celebrate the lover pining away for his beloved until his world shrinks to just her. There's no denying that it's romantic what with church bells pealing, complicated violin arrangements and a chorus which all reach a crescendo in the finale. It's a pleasant listen but still seems inspired."
  • Kollynews:"This one is the pick of the lot for me. Nice rap number. With amazing humming and very smart singing. Tamil lyrics are too good. The componsition and the use of guitar is at a different league. The lyrics suggest that the picturization should be interesting."

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Top 10 songs of 2010". Sify. 25 December 2010. 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. 

External links

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