A great duet recorded separately

Singaravelane Deva is known for synchrony between nagaswaram, human voice

January 16, 2021 03:18 am | Updated 03:18 am IST - CHENNAI

Karukurichi Arunachalam with Dr S. Radhakrishnan

Karukurichi Arunachalam with Dr S. Radhakrishnan

Released almost six decades ago on the day of Pongal, the film Konjum Salangai marked another milestone for nagaswaram player Karukurichi P. Arunachalam, whose birth centenary begins this year.

His rendition, along with playback singer S. Janaki, of the song Singaravelane Deva is celebrated as an example of the remarkable synchrony achieved between the nagaswaram and the human voice.

However, Arunachalam, a student of T.N. Rajarathinam Pillai, and Janaki did not record the song together. In fact, Arunachalam played a different song, and the lyrics were rewritten later to suit the tune and were sung by Janaki.

“Karukurichi Arunachalam actually rendered Manthiramavathu Neeru , the Thevaram song, to the tune set by T.A. Sambandamurthy Achari. He also played the swaras, and it was first recorded by music director S.M. Subbaiah Naidu,” says Vamanan, a historian of Tamil film music.

The film was released on January 14, 1962. The thavil was played by Perumpallam P. Venkatesan, who had accompanied Arunachalam for 12 years.

When the film crew wanted to create a duet scene, lyricist Ku. Ma. Balasubramanian penned a song to synchronise with the already rendered nagaswaram score. But the music director was not able to find a voice that could match the high pitch of the instrument. Many singers opted out. It was singer P. Leela who said Janaki could do justice to the song.

“It will be surprising to know that we rendered the songs separately. I used a headphone and sang the song in tune with the sruthi and mellifluousnesses of the nagaswaram. People celebrate the duet but as the artistes of the song, we had not met each other,” Janaki had said in an interview to Tamil magazine Ananda Vikatan in 1964, a copy of which was obtained by writer Lalitharam.

In the interview done after Arunachalam’s death in 1964, Janaki said though she had sung a lot of other songs, it was Singaravelane Deva that secured for her unprecedented fame and recognition.

“I first met him in Shanmugananda Hall in Bombay almost one-and-a-half years after the song was recorded. It was also our last meeting. When I told him of the recognition, he said it was Lord Muruga’s grace. He also invited me and my husband to Tiruchendur temple. But we did not get a chance to visit,” she had recalled.

Konjum Salangai also featured Vallalar’s Arutpa, Orumaiyudan Ninathu , by Soolamangalam Rajalakshmi in the raga Bilahari. It was followed by Arunachalam on the nagaswaram.

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