Melody and female vocals by Vigneshwari V.S, veena by Latha Henthry, vocals by J, arrangement by Farya Faraji. This is a Tamil-language song that incorporates elements of Carnatic Classical Music and Tamil folk music, using the verses 404 to 407 of the epic poem Kalingattuparani. The Kalingattuparani is a 12th-century Tamil poem written by Jayamkondar about the victory of Kulottunga Chola I over the Kalinga king, Anantavarman Chodaganga in the Chola-Kalinga war. Parani is a type of literature about a historical figure that slays a thousand war elephants in battle. The poem is regarded as one of the masterpieces of Tamil literature for its mastery of diction and the way its poetry creates rythmic effects. I worked with Tamil rapper J. to deliver the poem in its original metre, and contacted Vigneshwari V.S, a professionally trained Carnatic vocalist from Tamil Nadu who used her expertise in Carnatic music and anthropological knowledge to devise a melody for the otherwise spoken nature of the original poem. The raagam, or mode chosen by her is Gambheera Nattai. To quote her: "the choice is rooted in the rāgam's inherent power and majesty, which perfectly encapsulate the grandeur and intensity of the epic’s war sequences. The war scenes in Kalingathu Parani are rich with valor and heroism. Gambheera Nattai is traditionally used in compositions that evoke strength and divinity, making it an ideal choice to reflect the heroic qualities of the warriors in Kalingathu Parani." The instruments used are the South Indian mridangam and kanjira drums and the South Indian veena. Konnakol, the practice of vocalising drum patterns with stock syllables, accompanies the rythmic texture of the piece. Lyrics in Tamil: 404 எடுமெடு மெடுமென வெடுத்ததோர் இகலொலி கடலொலி யிகக்கவே விடுவிடு விடுபரி கரிக்குழாம் விடும்விடு மெனுமொலி மிகைக்கவே. 1 405 வெருவர வரிசிலை தெறித்தநாண் விசைபடு திசைமுகம் வெடிக்கவே செருவிடை யவரவர் தெழித்ததோர் தெழியுல குகள்செவி டெடுக்கவே. 2 இருபடைகளும் குதிரைகளும் 406 எறிகட லொடுகடல் கிடைத்தபோல் இருபடை களுமெதிர் கிடைக்கவே மறிதிரை யொடுதிரை மலைத்தபோல் வருபரி யொடுபரி மலைக்கவே. 3 யானைப் படையும் குதிரைப் படையும் 407 கனவரை யொடுவரை முனைத்தபோற் கடகரி யொடுகரி முனைக்கவே இனமுகின் முகிலொடு மெதிர்த்தபோல் இரதமொ டிரதமு மெதிர்க்கவே. English translation: Let us begin the war! Let us begin the war! Soldiers on both camps shouted, War cries reverberated like the roar of the ocean! Charge the cavalry here! Send the elephant division there! These war cries went on increasing! They stringed their strong bows Rending all the directions by their noise! In the battle-field. War cries struck the world dumb! Both the armies dashed against each other Like the confrontation of two oceans; The charging of the cavalries, Like the confrontation of foaming waves! Warring elephants dashed against each other Like the clash of the mountains! Chariots charged against each other Like the clash of the clouds!
Mesmerizing piece. Also, I have some suggestions for you; perhaps you could try these in the future *_Mahabharata - Epic Symphony_* *_Ashoka the Great - Epic Symphony_*
I am beyond grateful to be a part of this project! The song turned out incredibly well, and the combination of vocals, rap, and Veena is truly magical. Thank you, Farya Faraji, for this wonderful opportunity and for showcasing our work so beautifully. Feeling honored and thrilled by the outcome! 😊✨️🙏
Thats actually a good idea for a crossover! Theres alot of interaction between SE Asia and the Iranian and Mediterranean world that has only recently being researched. A Hikayat Iskandar Shah would be a wonderful crossover; its a Minangkabau retelling of the story of Alexander the Great derived from the Alexandrian romance which they intertwined with their ethnic genealogy. Think of it a SE Asian version of Virgil's Aeneid.
As a Tamil, the music style of Tamil singers has changed with a change in generations as can be heard here from the traditional Carnatic style. I don't listen to Tamil contemporary music much but can pick it up from my childhood many years ago. Thank you for sharing & collaborating. Greetings from Auckland 🇳🇿. வணக்கம். ரொம்ப நன்றி
For a war-themed song, this makes me vibe too much in the opposite direction. Amazing work and cheers for the extremely well-arranged collaboration with the Tamil artists!
Wonderful piece! Growing up in Chennai but born into Keraleeya Natya sampradaya family and pursuit, to find something like this is a treasure. Farya, what a great source of world music you are. The cholkettu part especially lends itself well to a martial dance. Cannot wait to pass this on to dance students of mine to experiment with. Merci !
"Sri Lanka is an island that everyone loves at some level inside themselves. A very special island that travellers, from Sinbad to Marco Polo, dreamed about. A place where the contours of the land itself forms a kind of sinewy poetry." - Romesh Gunesekera 🇱🇰
@imarocket1405 That would imply the musical sound heard here sounds happy in the Carnatic musical idiom, but maybe it doesn't. According to the Carnatic musician who wrote the melody, this mode evokes bravery and courage in the Carnatic idiom, she made no mention of it sounding happy. As far as we're concerned, maybe this sounds to the Carnatic idiom what the Superman theme sounds like to us
To give some context of actual history , Odisha was actually known as Kalinga , and it had already been subjugated once jnder rajendra I , but later develooments happened thus , it became independent of chola control , meanwhile the Ganga royal house was growing its influence in Odisha , and the Ganga Monarch Devendravarman had. Intermarried with tge Chola royal family , tbus Chodagangadeva was probably a grandson or nephew of Kulothunga . Although the Poem Kalingattuparani/KalingattuBarani , claims certain histoeical feats , most of which are true to some extent . Just to inform you in the longer run , it was Chodagangadeva who won sjbseqjenyky and entrenched his controll in andhra .
Another incredible rendition! Fantastic work. I've been looking into (mine own) Dravidian folk song tradition, namely 'Mapilla Paatu', the songs sung by the Muslims of Northern Kerala, the oldest Muslim community in South Asia and a composite of Arab (and even Persian) merchants who settled down and intermarried with the local people. (Kerala also boasts the oldest Jewish and Christian communities of South Asia) They are written in Arabi-Malayalam, the oldest surviving songs record the deeds of Martyrs who died fighting the Portuguese, but many others sing of Sufis and Islamic history generally. I suggest checking it out if you weren't familiar with it already.
Great work, I am always fascinated by Tamil culture and history, being someone from the north of the subcontinent. I look forward to more bangers from Tamilakam and anywhere else in Jambudvipa that you cook up! As a side note, I know it must be tiring for you to receive many suggestions, but I have wondered, if you're looking to delve deeper into African music tradition? Past the point of the Maghreb which you've covered of course, to the traditions of the eastern horn of Africa in a place as ancient as Ethiopia, or some of the western African cultures such as the Songhai or anything to do with the Empire of Mali. Seeing as you've started to delve into East Asian musical tradition, it is quite exciting that with a bit more time and a foray into the (plethora of) cultures of South East Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa, you will have songs and music pertaining to every corner of the Old World!
Love to my Greek brothers in the west 🇮🇳❤🇬🇷 A musical piece on the Indo-Greeks will be super cool for our ancient connections and probably an epic symphony on "Menander I Soter" (Milinda), the greatest Indo-Greek King.
What a lovely addition to the beautiful constellation you're creating with your channel. Sometime ago I came across the concept of konnakol, and I've found it very interesting. I love hearing it sung like that.
!!! wow. Where to begin... that's a goldmine, great job everyone!!! also thank you all for educating us on such an interesting culture :) really nice melody btw
sup farya im indian and this hits close to home. i can only imagine rajaraja chola charging with his forces to conquer and solidify his state in south asia for centuries and the conquests go while the solders charge in battle chanting this epic song Well done my fav song creator
@@mennyboy1528this song is good but idk why farya and his composers added carnatic touch to this war song… sounds funny, there are lot of alternative music such as Parai (the indigenous folk drum) that would perfectly suit this poem
@@Moselleball_fr57 wait really, that's nice I'm Egyptian I really want a coptic song Not an ancient Egyptian song, I think it might be impossible But coptic is still here so, he can study it
English translation: Let us begin the war! Let us begin the war! Soldiers on both camps shouted, War cries reverberated like the roar of the ocean! Charge the cavalry here! Send the elephant division there! These war cries went on increasing! They stringed their strong bows Rending all the directions by their noise! In the battle-field. War cries struck the world dumb! Both the armies dashed against each other Like the confrontation of two oceans; The charging of the cavalries, Like the confrontation of foaming waves! Warring elephants dashed against each other Like the clash of the mountains! Chariots charged against each other Like the clash of the clouds!
Can you make a video talking about Udio and your opinion on AI programs that create music and what you think of the future of creativity concerning it all?
@@hailbrazillianempirejerusalem Brasil, Goiás. Aqui têm vários brasileiros, mas não comentam (ou veem) todas as músicas do Faraji. Eu vejo todas, e comento em todas também, então sempre vai me ver por aí kkkk Já viu a música em português que ele fez? Uma em galego-português também
It is very interesting that the Indo-Aryans who conquered the Dravidians adopted their accent. The same thing happened when the Armenians conquered the Urartians.
The primary reason is cause the Indo-Aryans were much lower in number than the Dravidians were, but the Indo-Aryans were more influential, so Sanskrit slowly but surely replaced the Native Dravidian tongue.
They didn't adapt any "accent". We tend to think of this because of pop-culture, in which Indo-Aryans are seen as these European, white peoples with Iranian or Central Asian accents that assimilated into the culture of the Darker skinned Dravidians with their folk cultures. That isn't true - Sanskrit independently developed these linguistic traits even before reaching the Indian subcontinents, and their "accents" start to become homogenous by the end of the Vedic period, due to areal linguistics and the proximity in which these language groups were. Also, the group in mention are the Tamilians, a Dravidian people.
The same thing happened with the Türks when they assimilated into Iranian, Hellenic and Indian culture; they adopted their accent and way of talking, embracing their religion, culture, rituals, and practices.
I wouldn't know how to react if such a war song was dedicated to me. I'd probably gladly imagine it was a love song or a celebration 😂 Great work, Farya!
Would be fascinating if possible with the Gujarat Region of India which works and which form of Gujarat's Music will you choose and reflect on your Ideological view and Global Music trending as an outsider.
To give some context of actual history, Odisha was actually known as Kalinga, and it had already been subjugated once jnder rajendra I, but later develooments happened thus, it became independent of chola control, meanwhile the Ganga royal house was growing its influence in Odisha, and the Ganga Monarch Devendravarman had. Intermarried with tge Chola royal family, tbus Chodagangadeva was probably a grandson or nephew of Kulothunga. Although the Poem Kalingattuparani/Kalingattu Barani, claims certain histoeical feats, most of which are true to some extent. Just to inform you in the longer run, it was Chodagangadeva who won sjbseqjenyky and entrenched his controll in andhra.
As an odia hope you also make music on odia Gajapati empire of Kalinga or maybe Kharabela on their repective revenge wars. Gajapatis drive towards Tamil heartland and Kharabela drive towards Magadha.
@@AkashPrasannaVenkatesh69there are already historical odia poems about Gajapati conquests of Tamil lands. And farya could use Kharabela inscription to make a song.
@@faryafarajihow we can find J work in UA-cam? I tried to find J music in UA-cam, but i could not find it. I really apreciate if you could give us any link
Melody and female vocals by Vigneshwari V.S, veena by Latha Henthry, vocals by J, arrangement by Farya Faraji. This is a Tamil-language song that incorporates elements of Carnatic Classical Music and Tamil folk music, using the verses 404 to 407 of the epic poem Kalingattuparani.
The Kalingattuparani is a 12th-century Tamil poem written by Jayamkondar about the victory of Kulottunga Chola I over the Kalinga king, Anantavarman Chodaganga in the Chola-Kalinga war. Parani is a type of literature about a historical figure that slays a thousand war elephants in battle. The poem is regarded as one of the masterpieces of Tamil literature for its mastery of diction and the way its poetry creates rythmic effects.
I worked with Tamil rapper J. to deliver the poem in its original metre, and contacted Vigneshwari V.S, a professionally trained Carnatic vocalist from Tamil Nadu who used her expertise in Carnatic music and anthropological knowledge to devise a melody for the otherwise spoken nature of the original poem. The raagam, or mode chosen by her is Gambheera Nattai. To quote her: "the choice is rooted in the rāgam's inherent power and majesty, which perfectly encapsulate the grandeur and intensity of the epic’s war sequences. The war scenes in Kalingathu Parani are rich with valor and heroism.
Gambheera Nattai is traditionally used in compositions that evoke strength and divinity, making it an ideal choice to reflect the heroic qualities of the warriors in Kalingathu Parani."
The instruments used are the South Indian mridangam and kanjira drums and the South Indian veena. Konnakol, the practice of vocalising drum patterns with stock syllables, accompanies the rythmic texture of the piece.
Lyrics in Tamil:
404
எடுமெடு மெடுமென வெடுத்ததோர் இகலொலி கடலொலி யிகக்கவே
விடுவிடு விடுபரி கரிக்குழாம் விடும்விடு மெனுமொலி மிகைக்கவே. 1
405
வெருவர வரிசிலை தெறித்தநாண் விசைபடு திசைமுகம் வெடிக்கவே
செருவிடை யவரவர் தெழித்ததோர் தெழியுல குகள்செவி டெடுக்கவே. 2
இருபடைகளும் குதிரைகளும்
406
எறிகட லொடுகடல் கிடைத்தபோல் இருபடை களுமெதிர் கிடைக்கவே
மறிதிரை யொடுதிரை மலைத்தபோல் வருபரி யொடுபரி மலைக்கவே. 3
யானைப் படையும் குதிரைப் படையும்
407
கனவரை யொடுவரை முனைத்தபோற் கடகரி யொடுகரி முனைக்கவே
இனமுகின் முகிலொடு மெதிர்த்தபோல் இரதமொ டிரதமு மெதிர்க்கவே.
English translation:
Let us begin the war!
Let us begin the war!
Soldiers on both camps shouted,
War cries reverberated like the roar of the ocean!
Charge the cavalry here!
Send the elephant division there!
These war cries went on increasing!
They stringed their strong bows
Rending all the directions by their noise!
In the battle-field.
War cries struck the world dumb!
Both the armies dashed against each other
Like the confrontation of two oceans;
The charging of the cavalries,
Like the confrontation of foaming waves!
Warring elephants dashed against each other
Like the clash of the mountains!
Chariots charged against each other
Like the clash of the clouds!
Mesmerizing piece. Also, I have some suggestions for you; perhaps you could try these in the future
*_Mahabharata - Epic Symphony_*
*_Ashoka the Great - Epic Symphony_*
I am beyond grateful to be a part of this project! The song turned out incredibly well, and the combination of vocals, rap, and Veena is truly magical. Thank you, Farya Faraji, for this wonderful opportunity and for showcasing our work so beautifully. Feeling honored and thrilled by the outcome! 😊✨️🙏
Make more about tamil war songs
Farya you are like a musical all you can eat buffet. No lack of flavor for sure!
We are venturing deeper into Asia with these recent songs, can't wait for the Indonesian songs to eventually come
I can't wait for prehispanic music made by the Achaemenid
Thats actually a good idea for a crossover! Theres alot of interaction between SE Asia and the Iranian and Mediterranean world that has only recently being researched. A Hikayat Iskandar Shah would be a wonderful crossover; its a Minangkabau retelling of the story of Alexander the Great derived from the Alexandrian romance which they intertwined with their ethnic genealogy. Think of it a SE Asian version of Virgil's Aeneid.
Farya and the gamelan would be a fun one
Imagine Gajah Madah - Epic Majapahit Music
Like music from the ancient empire of Myanmar , and Khmer, stop your getting me hyped up!
As a Tamil, the music style of Tamil singers has changed with a change in generations as can be heard here from the traditional Carnatic style. I don't listen to Tamil contemporary music much but can pick it up from my childhood many years ago.
Thank you for sharing & collaborating. Greetings from Auckland 🇳🇿. வணக்கம். ரொம்ப நன்றி
As someone whose got a Tamil friend, I can definitely say that I appreciate this more than I would without my friendship to her! 🇱🇰
This Tamil rap-reggaeton is awesome (I love it)
For a war-themed song, this makes me vibe too much in the opposite direction. Amazing work and cheers for the extremely well-arranged collaboration with the Tamil artists!
This can legit pass as an ARR composition from the 90s (his best era), and honestly I can't think of higher praise than that!
Thank you 😊 🎉
Wonderful piece! Growing up in Chennai but born into Keraleeya Natya sampradaya family and pursuit, to find something like this is a treasure. Farya, what a great source of world music you are. The cholkettu part especially lends itself well to a martial dance. Cannot wait to pass this on to dance students of mine to experiment with. Merci !
뭔가 머릿속에 폭풍이 몰아치는 것 같은 느낌이 듭니다.
Whoa, the vocal range in this is amazing!! Those high notes are so clear. This is an absolute treat to listen to!
Thank you so much 😊 ✨️
@@vsvigneshwariofficialoh nice, very good voice you have. I am delighted by this music
@@DesertsOfHighfleet Thank you 😊 ✨️
"Sri Lanka is an island that everyone loves at some level inside themselves. A very special island that travellers, from Sinbad to Marco Polo, dreamed about. A place where the contours of the land itself forms a kind of sinewy poetry."
- Romesh Gunesekera 🇱🇰
This song has nothing to do with Sri Lanka.
This guy just COOKS to be honest . Much respect brother keep it up this is real music ! ( Love from Romania )
Her voice sounds exactly like the string instrument.
Thank you so much 😊✨️
My brain cant compute how this is supposed to be a war song.
That's the beauty of how culturally relative music is. What sounds like war music to one culture may be the sound of love songs to another
I don't know about you, but I'd be terrified if I saw a hundred warriors dropping the hardest bars ever heard at 54 words/second in Tamil
@@SrJombalel true
@@faryafaraji i mean, this is after a victory of a Tamil king over the Kalingas, so this is supposed to be happy, no?
@imarocket1405 That would imply the musical sound heard here sounds happy in the Carnatic musical idiom, but maybe it doesn't. According to the Carnatic musician who wrote the melody, this mode evokes bravery and courage in the Carnatic idiom, she made no mention of it sounding happy. As far as we're concerned, maybe this sounds to the Carnatic idiom what the Superman theme sounds like to us
Composition is superb... Vicky voice is amazing... Fabulous singer...
Thank you 😊 ✨️
YES! More Tamil music from Farya!! I love it!
Kulottunga Chola is vibing to this masterpiece after defeating the Chalukyas in the north and Kalinga in the northeast.
Or after sacked Srivijayan capital 😂
Preconceptions are bullshit.
Before I checked the description I was convinced it was a lyrical song about the lovely landscapes of southern India.
Thank you for this, tamil is such a mystic sounding language
When the Palani Panchamirtham hits just right
To give some context of actual history , Odisha was actually known as Kalinga , and it had already been subjugated once jnder rajendra I , but later develooments happened thus , it became independent of chola control , meanwhile the Ganga royal house was growing its influence in Odisha , and the Ganga Monarch Devendravarman had. Intermarried with tge Chola royal family , tbus Chodagangadeva was probably a grandson or nephew of Kulothunga . Although the Poem Kalingattuparani/KalingattuBarani , claims certain histoeical feats , most of which are true to some extent . Just to inform you in the longer run , it was Chodagangadeva who won sjbseqjenyky and entrenched his controll in andhra .
Yeah bro u are absolutely right
Love from India man 🙌✨🤝🔥
Waiting for you to drop a Sikh/Punjabi banger
I'd love to see a Ḍhāḍī ballad
One of my new favorite farya compositions
Another incredible rendition! Fantastic work.
I've been looking into (mine own) Dravidian folk song tradition, namely 'Mapilla Paatu', the songs sung by the Muslims of Northern Kerala, the oldest Muslim community in South Asia and a composite of Arab (and even Persian) merchants who settled down and intermarried with the local people. (Kerala also boasts the oldest Jewish and Christian communities of South Asia)
They are written in Arabi-Malayalam, the oldest surviving songs record the deeds of Martyrs who died fighting the Portuguese, but many others sing of Sufis and Islamic history generally. I suggest checking it out if you weren't familiar with it already.
Great work, I am always fascinated by Tamil culture and history, being someone from the north of the subcontinent. I look forward to more bangers from Tamilakam and anywhere else in Jambudvipa that you cook up!
As a side note, I know it must be tiring for you to receive many suggestions, but I have wondered, if you're looking to delve deeper into African music tradition? Past the point of the Maghreb which you've covered of course, to the traditions of the eastern horn of Africa in a place as ancient as Ethiopia, or some of the western African cultures such as the Songhai or anything to do with the Empire of Mali. Seeing as you've started to delve into East Asian musical tradition, it is quite exciting that with a bit more time and a foray into the (plethora of) cultures of South East Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa, you will have songs and music pertaining to every corner of the Old World!
Hope to see more stuff from other regions of India as well; Regardless, love your work!
Love out brothers in the east 🇬🇷❤🇮🇳
Love to my Greek brothers in the west 🇮🇳❤🇬🇷
A musical piece on the Indo-Greeks will be super cool for our ancient connections and probably an epic symphony on "Menander I Soter" (Milinda), the greatest Indo-Greek King.
This was ao catchy, great work
Thank you 😊 ✨️
What a lovely addition to the beautiful constellation you're creating with your channel.
Sometime ago I came across the concept of konnakol, and I've found it very interesting. I love hearing it sung like that.
Beautiful song 🤩
YEAH BOOOOIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!!!!!!!!!!!!! ANOTHER SOUTH INDIAN MASTERPIECE
Late to this video, but I never expected a Thamizh song to show up, I am impressed 🤓 Vanakkam Thamizh nanbas!
Vanakkam 😊Thank you for listening ✨️
Tamil❤: Love from kerala.
Guys, ❤ to all of you.
Would love to see some type of Maldivian music in the future. great work as always
Eminem 😵
Farya 😎
That's not Farya singing though, but yeah, Tamil rap hits different😼🔥
!!! wow. Where to begin... that's a goldmine, great job everyone!!! also thank you all for educating us on such an interesting culture :) really nice melody btw
Thank you 😊 ✨️
Didn't understand any of it but still felt it
sup farya im indian and this hits close to home. i can only imagine rajaraja chola charging with his forces to conquer and solidify his state in south asia for centuries and the conquests go while the solders charge in battle chanting this epic song
Well done my fav song creator
This was written for his descendant, a Chalukya Chola emperor called Kulottungan, when he defeated Kalinga
Extremely danceable. Awesome piece and amazing work by all involved. One of the more unusual examples of music I've heard yet on your channel!
The Maharaja is back!
Kalijumpscare
This tamil song have the potential to be a meme, i don't know.
It sounds too funny, to be a war poem
@@mennyboy1528this song is good but idk why farya and his composers added carnatic touch to this war song… sounds funny, there are lot of alternative music such as Parai (the indigenous folk drum) that would perfectly suit this poem
When we getting a song for Nader Shah
Banger as usual
This is very unusual, I like it
Wow, those vocals ❤
Thank you for listening 😊✨️
ridiculously groovy
Awesome work as usual Farya!
Excellent
You should do a Basque song if possible!
truly epic ❤
I was half expecting Farya to speak Tamil. But it’s someone else.
This isn't a song, it's a tongue twister. 😂
It's both
Its tamil language its sung in fast phase though.
It’s actually poetry meant to be sung in a metre. Perhaps it’s true that it’s hard to pronounce it
Amazing!
I don't understand anything but if Farya did it, I like
Amazing! Great job!
به هر چیزی فکر می کردم ، جز این ، کارهای شما من رو همیشه غافلگیر می کنه . ❤
Very nice farya
As an northeast Bengali Indian , I am listening to Tamil song first time
Coptic music would be nice ngl
But this is fire
I litteraly just posted a comment about egyptian songs 😅
@@Moselleball_fr57 wait really, that's nice
I'm Egyptian I really want a coptic song
Not an ancient Egyptian song, I think it might be impossible
But coptic is still here so, he can study it
@@stiqioy yeah coptic is more accessible I always wanted to hear something in coptic/egyptian
Very nice 🎉
Thank you 😊❤️✨️
Good timing with India winning in the chess olympiad. Chess is pretty big with Tamils xd
Is there a link to the other singers?
Do they have online presents?
Thank you for listening 😊✨️
Have you heard the song Sede by El hadji Faye? I feel like you'd have fun recreating that one. Such a great song.
Thanks, Farya ❤
I would like to hear something in Hindi by you :)
English translation:
Let us begin the war!
Let us begin the war!
Soldiers on both camps shouted,
War cries reverberated like the roar of the ocean!
Charge the cavalry here!
Send the elephant division there!
These war cries went on increasing!
They stringed their strong bows
Rending all the directions by their noise!
In the battle-field.
War cries struck the world dumb!
Both the armies dashed against each other
Like the confrontation of two oceans;
The charging of the cavalries,
Like the confrontation of foaming waves!
Warring elephants dashed against each other
Like the clash of the mountains!
Chariots charged against each other
Like the clash of the clouds!
They chased the mughals out of there 17 times listening to this.
WE GETTIN' OUTTA SOUTH INDIA WITH THIS ONE 🔥🔥🔥🗣🗣🗣
Can you make a video talking about Udio and your opinion on AI programs that create music and what you think of the future of creativity concerning it all?
Why this channel is not famous
Mention it as south Indian Tamil music🙏🙏👏👏
Even last time with Kuttuvan Kotai he did that
What a happy little tune of war.
Another epic creation ❤❤❤
Que trava-línguas bonito 😅😅
Ótimo,encontrei um falante de Português aqui. Daonde tu é.?
@@hailbrazillianempirejerusalem Brasil, Goiás.
Aqui têm vários brasileiros, mas não comentam (ou veem) todas as músicas do Faraji. Eu vejo todas, e comento em todas também, então sempre vai me ver por aí kkkk
Já viu a música em português que ele fez? Uma em galego-português também
I'll wait for the day when you sing the Sanskrit song: Shiva Tandava Stotram
It is very interesting that the Indo-Aryans who conquered the Dravidians adopted their accent. The same thing happened when the Armenians conquered the Urartians.
The primary reason is cause the Indo-Aryans were much lower in number than the Dravidians were, but the Indo-Aryans were more influential, so Sanskrit slowly but surely replaced the Native Dravidian tongue.
They didn't adapt any "accent". We tend to think of this because of pop-culture, in which Indo-Aryans are seen as these European, white peoples with Iranian or Central Asian accents that assimilated into the culture of the Darker skinned Dravidians with their folk cultures. That isn't true - Sanskrit independently developed these linguistic traits even before reaching the Indian subcontinents, and their "accents" start to become homogenous by the end of the Vedic period, due to areal linguistics and the proximity in which these language groups were. Also, the group in mention are the Tamilians, a Dravidian people.
@@ahouranouri516 except possibly Brahui
The same thing happened with the Türks when they assimilated into Iranian, Hellenic and Indian culture; they adopted their accent and way of talking, embracing their religion, culture, rituals, and practices.
@@loop4569 Brahui speakers hadn't been there from the beginning. they are later migrants.
Очень красивая музыка
Very nice
Indian rap
There's actually a lot. Punjabi rap is a pretty prolific genre.
Any Odiya here?
No but I am from Spain :D Hi friend!
Here is a Mexican who enjoys the music of the Achaemenid, the music Shahanshah Farya Faraji
@@mennyboy1528 Hello brotha, creo que le vamos a saludar de todos los lugares menos de Odisha xdxd.
Haryanvi here, greetings to my Odiya compatriots.
I am an odia bro. କେମିତି ଅଛ ତୁମେ ଭାଇନା?
I wouldn't know how to react if such a war song was dedicated to me. I'd probably gladly imagine it was a love song or a celebration 😂
Great work, Farya!
First, it's epic
Can you do something about the Vijayanagaras. It can be in Kannada and Telugu.
Would be fascinating if possible with the Gujarat Region of India which works and which form of Gujarat's Music will you choose and reflect on your Ideological view and Global Music trending as an outsider.
Please try north indic as well. ❤️🔥🙏🏻
Wow!
Jai Kalinga 🚩
To give some context of actual history, Odisha was actually known as Kalinga, and it had already been subjugated once jnder rajendra I, but later develooments happened thus, it became independent of chola control, meanwhile the Ganga royal house was growing its influence in Odisha, and the Ganga Monarch Devendravarman had. Intermarried with tge Chola royal family, tbus Chodagangadeva was probably a grandson or nephew of Kulothunga. Although the Poem Kalingattuparani/Kalingattu Barani, claims certain histoeical feats, most of which are true to some extent. Just to inform you in the longer run, it was Chodagangadeva who won sjbseqjenyky and entrenched his controll in andhra.
I hope you make southeast Asian/ Asean countries music
nice
Do a telugu Andhra Pradesh indian music bro
👍
As an odia hope you also make music on odia Gajapati empire of Kalinga or maybe Kharabela on their repective revenge wars. Gajapatis drive towards Tamil heartland and Kharabela drive towards Magadha.
Bro this song kalingattuparani was historically written during the time of cholas, now writing a song wont be possible (no hate to kalinga kingdoms)
@@AkashPrasannaVenkatesh69there are already historical odia poems about Gajapati conquests of Tamil lands. And farya could use Kharabela inscription to make a song.
@@SafavidAfsharid3197 Are you a Gajapati enjoyer or Safavid?
@@AkashPrasannaVenkatesh69I am an Odia.
35 secs ago,no views.
Barodaram,u fell off 😂💓
(seriously tho,another classic from Farya. the best in the East)
Ooh, this is a treat!
Will you ever approach southeast asia, now that you've done south and east asia? :D
Eṭumeṭu meṭumena veṭuttatōr ikaloli kaṭaloli yikakkavē
Viṭuviṭu viṭupari karikkuḻām viṭumviṭu meṉumoli mikaikkavē
Veṟuvara varicilai teṟittanāṇ vicaipaṭu ticaimukam veṭikkavē
Ceruviṭai yavaravar teḻittatōr teḻiyulakukalsevi teṭukkavē
Irupaṭaikaḷum kutiraikaḷum
Eṟikaṭal oṭukaṭal kiṭaittapoḷ irupaṭaikaḷumetir kiṭaikkavē
Maṟitira iṭutira malaittapoḷ varupari oṭupari malaikkavē
Yāṉaippaṭaiyum kutiraippaṭaiyum
Kaṇavarai oṭuvarai muṉaittapoṟ kaṭakari oṭukari muṉaikkavē
Iṉamukiṉ mukilōṭu metirtapoḷ iratamoṭ iratamu metirkavē
thank you man for the transliteration!
@@skarryprankhunter my pleasure! (I asked ChatGTP lol)
Far Cry 4 vibes.
One of my fav
I wonder how my people, the Telugu, witnessed this chaotic centuries long struggle between Kalinga Odias and Chola Tamils 💀 fire song though
Odias held the fort of udayagiri for nearly 2 years without help from mainland odisha against Krishna Deva raya.
Who is J?
A Tamil rapper
@@faryafarajihow we can find J work in UA-cam? I tried to find J music in UA-cam, but i could not find it.
I really apreciate if you could give us any link
Tamilian here 😎