Sanaadi Appanna

Sanaadi Appanna
Directed by Vijay
Produced by Saraswathi Srinivas
V. S. Murali
Written by Krishnamoorthy Puranik
Screenplay by Chi. Udaya Shankar
Based on Sanaadi Appanna 
by Krishnamoorthy Puranik
Starring
Music by G. K. Venkatesh
Cinematography R. Chittibabu
Edited by P. Bhaktavatsalam
Distributed by Anandalakshmi Enterprises
Release dates
  • August 1977
Running time
170 minutes
Country India
Language Kannada

Sanaadi Appanna (Kannada: ಸನಾದಿ ಅಪ್ಪಣ್ಣ) is a 1977 Indian Kannada film directed by Vijay, based on a novel of the same name by Krishnamoorthy Puranik,[1] and starring Rajkumar and Jaya Prada in lead roles. The supporting cast features Ashok, Balakrishna, R. Sampath, Thoogudeepa Srinivas, Papamma and Madhavi (credited as Baby Madhavi).

The film is considered a landmark in Kannada cinema.[2] It is notable for the shehnai played for Rajkumar's character by Bismillah Khan.

Cast

Production

Sanaadi translates to shehnai in the Kannada language. The films deals with the life of a rural shehnai artiste Appannna (played by Rajkumar). In early 1977, Bismillah Khan flew from Varanasi with his ten-member troupe to Prasad Studios in Madras (now Chennai) and spent nine days working on the film.[3][2]

Soundtrack

Sanaadi Appanna

Soundtrack cover
Soundtrack album by G. K. Venkatesh
Released 1977
Genre Feature film soundtrack
Length 35:18
Label Saregama

The music for the film and soundtracks were composed by G. K. Venkatesh. The album has 7 soundtrack, which includes Shehnai played by Bismillah Khan.[4]

Tracklist
No. TitleLyricsArtist(s) Length
1. "Naane Thaayi Naane Thande"  Chi. Udaya ShankarP. B. Sreenivas 6:05
2. "Shehanoi Music Bit"   Bismillah Khan 3:03
3. "Raaga Anuraaga"  Chi. Udaya ShankarRajkumar, S. Janaki 4:23
4. "Ninagaagi Ododi Bande"  Chi. Udaya ShankarRajkumar 5:08
5. "Shennai With Dialogues Raga Marwe"   Bismillah Khan 4:42
6. "Karedaru Kelade"  Chi. Udaya ShankarS. Janaki 6:58
7. "Shennai With Diloguos Raga Sindhubhaira"   Bismillah Khan 4:59
Total length:
35:18

Release

The film made its theatrical release in August 1977. It completed a 100-day run in many centers across Karnataka. In the last week of November 1977, during the centenary day celebration at the Urvashi Theatre in Bangalore, Rajkumar paid tribute to Bismillah Khan saying, "I just acted in the role but Ustad Bismillah Khan is the real soul of the film. He gave life to the character I played in the film."[3]

References

  1. "'Teachers, do not denigrate profession by begging for awards'". Deccan Herald. 8 September 2007. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "When his divine sanadi came our way". The Hindu. 14 July 2003. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "When Ustad Bismillah Khan inspired Dr Raj Kumar". Rediff.com. 21 August 2006. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  4. "Sanaadi Appanna music". iTunes. Retrieved 21 August 2014.

External links