Echoes in Simmendramadhyamam — From Ilaiyaraaja’s Anandha Raagam to Bala Bharathi’s Taj Mahal Thevai Illai
“Two songs, a dozen years apart — bound by one raga that sings across time and temperament, carrying the fragrance of innocence, devotion, and memory; a single melodic soul reborn as both wonder and worship.”
1. Introduction
There is a rare beauty in musical homage — when one composer leans into the legacy of another, not to mimic, but to converse. In the annals of Tamil film music, Taj Mahal Thevai Illai Anname Anname (from Amaravathi, 1993) by Bala Bharathi stands as a deeply felt tribute to Ilaiyaraaja’s Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam (from Panneer Pushpangal, 1981).
What binds them is not just emotional intent but a shared rāga backbone — Simhendramadhyamam — a melakarta that, in the hands of both composers, becomes a subtle yet powerful conduit of nostalgia, longing, and reverence.
As a listener who has lived with Ilaiyaraaja’s music since the late 1970s, I feel a quiet recognition whenever Taj Mahal Thevai Illai begins — a sense that the spirit of Anandha Raagam still lingers, softly reimagined. This essay explores that connection — a raga-rooted dialogue between two songs, two composers, and two emotional worlds.
2. The Grammar and Gait of Simhendramadhyamam
To trace the musical kinship between these two compositions, one must first linger on the raga that breathes through both — Simhendramadhyamam, the fifty-seventh melakarta, a raga of discipline, dignity, and slow-burning passion.
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Melakarta Number: 57
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Arohanam (Ascent): S R₂ G₂ M₂ P D₁ N₃ S
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Avarohanam (Descent): S N₃ D₁ P M₂ G₂ R₂ S
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Swaras Used: Chatushruti Rishabha (R₂), Sādhāraṇa Gandhāra (G₂), Prati Madhyama (M₂), Shuddha Dhaivata (D₁), Kākali Nishāda (N₃)
Salient Traits:
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A sampūrṇa raga, embracing all seven notes in both ascent and descent — the hallmark of the melakarta lineage.
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Rich in gamaka, those tender oscillations and microbends that lend Carnatic melody its breath and suppleness.
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It finds its true eloquence in the upper octave, where emotion turns luminous and sustained notes bloom like slow dawn.
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In temperament, the raga is majestic yet meditative — poised between regal gravity and inward reflection.
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In Western tonality, its structure mirrors the Hungarian Minor scale, a fascinating bridge between two musical cultures.
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In the Dīkṣitar tradition, it is also known by another luminous name — Sumadyuti.
Simhendramadhyamam is not a raga of flamboyant leaps or hurried flourishes. It prefers the quiet grandeur of restraint — the elegance of pauses, the grace of unfolding. It thrives in vilambit, in patience and poise, speaking not in bursts of brilliance but in measured breaths of emotion. It is a raga that waits — and in that waiting, reveals its depth.
3. Ilaiyaraaja’s Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam — A Raga of Youthful Longing
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Film: Panneer Pushpangal (1981)
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Singer: Uma Ramanan
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Lyricist: Gangai Amaran
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Composer: Ilaiyaraaja
When Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam begins, we are instantly drawn into the world of Simhendramadhyamam. The melody glides G₂ → M₂ → P like a sigh carried by twilight. Ilaiyaraaja’s orchestration is spare yet profound — flute, strings, and soft harmonies giving the raga’s gravitas room to breathe.
Uma Ramanan’s crystalline voice captures a wistful innocence. She sings not with assertion, but with gentle curiosity: every note feels like a question, every pause like a heartbeat held still. The rhythm flows in a gentle 6/8 sway — not driving forward, but circling tenderly, like ripples on still water.
The lyric — “Aayiram aasaiyil un nenjam paadaadho…” — conveys the tremor of first love. In Ilaiyaraaja’s hands, the raga becomes an architecture of innocence, built from silence, longing, and the quiet ache of discovery.
4. Bala Bharathi’s Taj Mahal Thevai Illai — Homage, Heart, and Scale
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Film: Amaravathi (1993)
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Singers: S. P. Balasubrahmanyam & S. Janaki
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Lyricist: Vairamuthu
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Composer: Bala Bharathi
Bala Bharathi’s Taj Mahal Thevai Illai Anname Anname opens with the tender hush of flute and synth — an unmistakable nod to Ilaiyaraaja’s phrasing. Yet, what follows soon diverges: layered strings, digital warmth, and early-90s tonal lushness paint a wider emotional canvas.
SPB’s rendition carries the dignity of devotion — a voice not just singing to a beloved, but to an ideal. S. Janaki answers with gentle grace, turning the duet into a dialogue between love and reverence.
Melodically, the song often recalls Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam: familiar ascents, mirrored pauses, the same Simhendramadhyamam breathings. Yet Bala Bharathi lets the song wander, exploring subtler emotional shades. It feels less like imitation, more like remembrance — a scale reborn as a salutation.
5. Comparing the Two — A Musical Table
| Feature | Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam | Taj Mahal Thevai Illai Anname Anname |
|---|---|---|
| Composer | Ilaiyaraaja | Bala Bharathi |
| Singer(s) | Uma Ramanan | SPB, S. Janaki |
| Emotional Core | Longing, youth, introspection | Reverence, maturity, devotion |
| Orchestration | Sparse, acoustic, flute + strings | Lush, layered, synth + orchestral strings |
| Use of Raga | Faithful to Simhendramadhyamam’s grammar | Inspired by its scale and motifs, with flexible phrasing |
| Mood | Intimate, inward-turning | Expansive, outward-reaching |
| Tribute Element | Original, foundational | Homage through melodic echo and tone |
6. Thematic Continuum — From Question to Reverent Answer
If Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam is a young heart asking, “Do you hear the raga of my yearning?”, then Taj Mahal Thevai Illai is its serene reply: “Yes — and I build a monument in song to hold that longing.”
Ilaiyaraaja’s composition is the tremulous first blush of feeling; Bala Bharathi’s is its mature reflection. The shared raga becomes not just a melodic framework, but a bridge of emotion across time — where innocence finds its echo in reverence, and homage becomes continuity.
7. Context and Continuity
In the early 1980s, Ilaiyaraaja was quietly reshaping the grammar of Tamil film music — weaving classical ragas into popular soundscapes with an ease that felt both natural and revolutionary. By the early 1990s, a new generation of composers, Bala Bharathi among them, carried that idiom forward — not as imitation, but as inheritance.
Taj Mahal Thevai Illai remains one of the most heartfelt tributes of that era: a disciple saluting his master through melody rather than declaration. It is not an echo of dependence, but an articulation of gratitude — music bowing to music.
8. Listener’s Reflection — The Veteran Ear
“Whenever I hear Taj Mahal Thevai Illai, the very first breath of melody takes me back to Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam. The kinship is unmistakable — the same melodic curves, the same wistful pauses, the same quiet ache of Simhendramadhyamam. Yet Bala Bharathi’s song walks its own path. It wanders, it returns, it bows in reverence. What I hear is not imitation, but remembrance — the raga remembering itself.”
This reflection captures what technical analysis never quite can — that fleeting sense of recognition without reasoning. Some bonds in music are not studied; they are simply known. To those who have lived with these melodies for years, the ear itself remembers — listening not just to sound, but to time, to tenderness, and to the raga’s own memory of its earlier self.
9. Where Words Meet Music — Hear the Echoes
🎧 Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam (Panneer Pushpangal, 1981)
🎧 Taj Mahal Thevai Illai Anname Anname (Amaravathi, 1993)
10. Conclusion — Melodic Memory as Legacy
Between Ilaiyaraaja’s Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam and Bala Bharathi’s Taj Mahal Thevai Illai flows a single melodic spirit — Simhendramadhyamam — carrying within it two reflections of the same soul. What in the former was youthful wonder and tender introspection becomes, in the latter, a quiet prayer — devotion tinged with remembrance.
Ilaiyaraaja approached the raga as one discovering beauty for the first time; Bala Bharathi, as one returning to it with gratitude. Their dialogue is not merely musical but emotional — a conversation across time and temperament.
In both, Simhendramadhyamam transcends grammar and scale. It becomes memory itself — the living pulse between master and admirer, between silence and sound. The raga does not conclude; it recedes, leaving behind the fragrance of restraint.
As Ilaiyaraaja once said, “Ragas are like people; they respond differently depending on how you love them.”
Perhaps that is the grace of this story — for Bala Bharathi loved the same raga that Ilaiyaraaja once awakened, and through that love, allowed it to sing again.
Author’s Note
I have lived with Ilaiyaraaja’s music for as long as I can remember. I write not as a musician, but as a listener who has learned to read emotion through sound — to sense a raga’s intent the way one senses sunlight through a curtain. My understanding of music is born of listening, of quiet curiosity, of seeing how a melody can mirror a human thought. Each essay I write is, in essence, a gesture of gratitude — to the composers who revealed that music is not merely heard, but felt into being.
— Dhinakar Rajaram
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© Dhinakar Rajaram, 2025. All rights reserved.
This work — Two Songs, One Soul: Echoes in Simmendramadhyamam — From Ilaiyaraaja’s Anandha Raagam to Bala Bharathi’s Taj Mahal Thevai Illai — is an original work of research, reflection, and composition by the author.
No part of this publication, including text, imagery, or design, may be reproduced, redistributed, or adapted — in whole or in part — without explicit written consent. Quotations for academic or non-commercial purposes are welcome with proper attribution.
Cover Design: © Dhinakar Rajaram, 2025
Concept & Research: Dhinakar Rajaram
Typography & Layout: Inspired by traditional Carnatic motifs and early Tamil film poster aesthetics.
Artwork Theme: A symbolic continuum of Simhendramadhyamam — blending the lyrical introspection of Anandha Raagam Keetkum Kaalam with the devotional resonance of Taj Mahal Thevai Illai.











