I never thought I’ll write about all this in the same article itself but I’ve been doing therapeutic word vomiting all year so figured why not.
So yeah. This blog suddenly comes to use whenever a sad event occurs in my world and looks like I‘ve got the year right. That is what it is. This year is nothing but a series of terrible events one after the other and me ranting about it endlessly so here’s one such non rechecked limited vocabulary rant of another human being we lost to the curse of 2020, but this time with a mission to remember.
Just like every alternate tamizh music listener in my generation, SPB was the first singer I ever knew growing up. He was an icon to my parents. Much before I learnt music or understood, why exactly he is the single most versatile performing singer I will ever see, the name already struck a chord with me. In my journey into music for the love of cinema or the love of art rather, SPB will always be the person who has travelled with me the longest right from that Namma Shivaya CD that my father still theya theya plays in the puja room like it is a ritual along with what we do for god. We’ve got so used to it. And the news rattled all of us. I, personally never did want to go down spiral. Never at all. I took off from newsfeeds of Instagram and Twitter, dodged tribute posts, switched off TVs when they chose to finally do their job right by playing the exact right songs that should be played. A friend of mine says “Denial is absolutely not the right way to deal with things. But it is certainly the easiest way” and that’s the path I’m taking on for now. Denial to a point where I am showing all the anger on the world on a poor CSK team which lost yesterday. I’ll get to accept it in my own time and I hope I go there as soon as possible without much damage but for my parents’ side, I really couldn’t do anything about it. I saw my dad tearing up for the first time since thatha’s funeral seeing the last rites being performed yesterday. Now, this is a man he grew up with. I’m a guy who merely idolized SPB like a million others, but my father is from a generation that walked through life with him. What is he feeling? No idea. Is this how I’m going to feel when someone who I walked through my life takes off into the clouds? It is inevitable but this is the last thing in the world that I want to experience.

I really didn’t know what to write about after seeing all this yesterday but I knew this is my only way out of this misery. Blabbing my way into my computer screen and it has weirdly worked out well in the past. I am a nobody to talk about his greatness and I am nowhere near close to qualified to do it. But I want to in my own way. The impact SPB songs has had in my life (more in the last 3 years or so) is absolutely immeasurable. Words can’t prove justice to it and the only possible way to do it was actually rekindle my memory of the times the big man’s voice made my life better. I can’t count how many times this happened throughout the journey but I remember the best of those, god bless my memory. From music, to lyrics, to what my world was at that point of time, SPB is the closest to what I feel when I sit across the Marina – This entity which I always know that I could fall upon with all my happiness and sorrow and not get judged for it. And finally, intentionally or unintentionally he gave me what I was searching for – whether it was closure, or revelations or devotion etc. etc. So here it goes (with dates for me to come back to this same blog, read it, and laugh-cry with myself.)
Note :- These are certainly not his best songs. It’s just that these are my songs. Thottaa konnuduven.
Pennalla Pennalla Oothappoo – December 2017
A very fuckall start in this list you may think, is with arguably my favourite light hearted song SPB has ever sung. You know how everyone has this dream love one side love song no? This is mine. Half of the world doesn’t know this song exists. The rest doesn’t know that this is AR Rahman music. Even if you are a person who says “dei enna olarra”, I like to believe in the above statement. One side I want to stand at the top of the lighthouse and shout that this is the most beautiful piece of poetry I’ve ever heard and on the other side I want to lock this in the deepest parts of my hearts and keep it to myself. I’m this sucker for the beautiful tamizh in music and flute interludes and that little involuntary smile that I got when I heard it for the first time is priceless. Way back in 2017(feels like a lifetime ago), I decided that if I ever want to sing one song with my kandraavi aana katta voice to a special someone, it would be this, atleast showing 1 percent of the love that SPB showed with just his voice.

Oruvan Oruvan Muthalaali – All life
This is that mandatory thalaivar reference that I have on every blogpost because no part of my life is complete without a thalaivar reference. And I can’t find a more fitting reference here. I was one of those dumb kids who was thinking thalaivar was so cool, he sang his own opening songs(I think from Sivaji The Boss only I realized thalaivar can’t hold his breath this long). And with no other actor I felt this way because it looked so artificial with others. Rajinikanth and SPB is a match made in heaven and I’m willing to fight for this statement at any stage in the world. So much that I still think Baba flopped only because SPB didn’t do opening song. And out of all the Naa Autokaaran, Ballelaikka, En peru padayappa, Vanthenda Paalkaaran, Devuda Devuda and so many other songs which gave all the energy when I needed the most, Oruvan Oruvan Muthalaali for me is the godfather of all peak thalaivar intro songs. I can’t imagine a stretch of my life whether it was the worst or the best that Oruvan Oruvan Muthalaali wasn’t a part of and I don’t know who I should owe this to. SPB? Rahman? Thalaivar? Vairamuthu? I’ll never know.

“Mannin meethu manithanukaasai
Manithan meethu mannukkaasai
Mannthan kadaisiyil jeikkirathu
Ithai manamthan unara marukkirathu”
“Kaiyil konjam kaasu irunthaal
Neethan atharku ejamaanan
Kazhuthu varaikkum kasu irunthal
Athuthan unakku ejamanan.”
I’m taking every single line to my grave. Thank you
Kaatukuyilu – August 2019
The film Thalapathi holds a special status in my life. I still believe that it is one of those rare perfect films which never got anything wrong with respect to anything and by far, thalaivar’s greatest ever. For all the “natpu nu enna nu theriyuma” and “thodra paapom” moments that Mani saar literally sculpted in the film to celebrate the friendship between Deva and Suriya, for me the real celebration of friendship was in Kaatukuyilu from Ilayaraja, SPB and Yesudas. I’ve been the guy who wanted the most friends all along life. But then only very lately, I realized that this isn’t as easy as I think and 3 good friends actually matter more than 30 odd ones. But then in time’s lovely turn of events, the “friendship” blessing is one of the things that I’ll be forever grateful for in the last 2 years. And this particular moment was in a Mottamaadi Music show in Sathyam Theatre Main Screen with 10 of my bestest friends (dress coded. As fuckall as possible) along with 1000 others singing the second stanza of Kaatukuyilu at the top of our voices. That was it. By time the song ended, I knew that every single moment of making friends with these people has led to this exact moment singing Kaatukuyilu with them.

“Sogam vitu sorgam thottu
Raagam ittu thaalam ittu
Paatu paadum vaanambadi
Naam dhaan”
Madai Thiranthu – Second half of 2018
I want to talk about this in detail because this is really really distinctive. I love music. Anyone who knows me even a little know that I live through tamil music. And this really really started in 2018 with me alone, not knowing what to concentrate my energy on. And here I am, 2 years later, with people I can recommend songs to and they actually listen (very difficult to find. Mark my words. I’ve been there), with a job for which I can write and talk music that I love and also get paid for. For the artform that changed my entire life, I don’t think anyone in the world has honored it enough as much as SPB and Ilayaraja did together. Check this out. Even other than Madai Thiranthu, these are the songs SPB has sung about music – with due respect to the situation in the film or as a celebration and most of times a very beautiful metaphorical reference to himself.

Madai Thiranthu, Nizhalgal (1980)
Sangeetha Megam, Udhaya Geetham (1985)
Idhayam Oru Kovil, Idhaya Kovil (1985)
Kaadhalin Deepam Ondru, Thambikku Entha Ooru (1984)
Mettupodu, Duet (1994)
Raagangal Pathinaaru, Thillu Mullu (1981)
Ilaya Nila, Payanangal Mudivathillai (1982)
Sangeetha Jaadhi Mullai, Kadhal Oviyam (1982)
Athinthom, Chandramukhi (2005)
And the list goes on. This is something that makes SPB stand at a really special pedestal in my life. A place no one else can reach because, in my short life, he was the first person to give it back to the art in the form of art. Like a painter painting a painting of him painting and actually going on to prove justice to it.
“Indha thegam maraindhaalum isaiyaai malarven”
Mandram Vantha – June 2019
Oh the last 2 songs in this list is the most fun and attacked me the most. So, we at home worship the Mouna Ragam album. In various different ways. Even though, I’ve never been possessive over a Mouna Ragam song for some reason, appa has always been a Nilaave Va person (appa has some love story with it but just like every Indian dad, guy is not telling me). It was mid-2019, on an evening dedicated to SPB (Thanks Badri Seshadri if you are reading this) when I figured out that Mouna Ragam has something in my life too. It was a time filled with questions. Too many of them. And I couldn’t my answers to anyone because it involved another person. A time where things were happening all around me but I never know what is good or bad. There it came like a flight crash from above, with “Boopaalamae koodadhennum vaanam undo sol..” with 100 other people. I can call it a revelation or a miracle. But I chose to call it a way of life. A life in which if you believe that you are sincere about a question, you always find the answer. In some way or the other. And however idiotic, the answer may sound at that time, everything happens for a reason. And here, the reason is SPB.

Minnale Nee Vanthathenadi – Febraury 2018
I never thought in my life that I’ll come around talking about this time but yes, I’ve finally pulled up a little courage. SPB made me realize that I’m in love for the first time in my life. And how? By getting my heartbroken. It’s the greatest story that you’ll ever hear. The greatest dramatic coincidences ever to happen in a human being’s life and this exactly was the day of all things I decided that I wouldn’t wish a heartbreak on my worst enemy. I can never separate this song from the event and vice versa and at that point, I didn’t know whether to be happy or sad that SPB and Rahman were by my side when this happened (happy now. The happiest. I couldn’t have asked for better people and a better song.) It is something that haunted me ever since then, just like how the strings start. And as the song says, everything happened in a flash. The lyrics and SPB’s voice with it burnt a hole in my heart that I thought will never heal. But time had other ideas. This February, exactly after 2 years since its happened, I finally decided that this is my greatest SPB song ever and I don’t think I’ll have a reconsideration over it. And someday I wish I have a little more courage to talk about the entire song in detail line by line.

“Kanneeril thee valarthu kaathirukiren
Un kaaladi thadathil naan poothirukiren”
I can’t even imagine how many I’ve missed. Off the top of my head, there was this time when I tried to hold my breath and sing like him in Mannil Intha Kaadhal and my voice only went lower and lower with each line and all I could pull off is the heavy breathing. His role in Kadhalan as Prabhudeva’s dad is one of my most favourite dad characters in tamil cinema. En Kadhale, SPB and Kadri Gopalnath’s saxophone has another story like Minnale Nee Vanthethanadi in my life but I’ll keep that one for another episode.
Apart from all this, he holds the record for singing the most songs by anyone in the world. 40,000 songs. You are wondering how much this is? Let me break it down for you.
If we average each song as 5 minutes.
40,000 x 5 = 2,00,000 minutes.
2,00,000/60 = 3333 hours.
3333/24 = 138.8 days
That is if you play the first song that SPB ever sung now and play everything on loop all day in the order of release, it takes around 4 and half months to reach Chumma Kizhi. Let that sink in.
For such a human, media might focus on his death for 2 days. Social Media hype might be there for the next 1 week. But for every person who truly loves him, he lives all along in little things like that Ha in Kaadhalin Deepam Ondru or every time he cute ah laughs in Suthi suthi vantheeha. If you see the list of events above in my life, it follows a pattern. He stayed with me through friendship, through celebration, through questions, through love, through heartbreak, through almost every emotion that a person goes through in his adult life. Like that, he lives through us with every single memory in our life that can be associated with an SPB song. No performing artist ever dies as long as the art they lived for breathes. And as long as YouTube exists, my earphone company doesn’t shut down, my OC speaker still keeps playing music, SPB lives on. And his name stands as the man whose voice went on to shape an entire generation.
Thank you SPB. Thank you for everything.































