Rapper Blaaze and his song dedicated to ChennaiShankaran MaliniExpress News 
ServiceFirst Published : 20 Aug 2010 12:13:00 AM ISTLast Updated : 21 Aug 2010 
03:32:00 PM ISTBlaaze (Pic: ENS).Chennai-born rapper, Blaaze, wears many hats 
and has closely worked with music maestro AR Rahman. Expresso tunes in to his 
latest song dedicated to Namma Chennai.InspirationThe song is about the origin 
of my name, Lakshmi Narasimha Vijaya Rajagopala Sheshadri Sharma Rajesh Raman, 
and how its meaning is related in every aspect to Chennai. It is dedicated to 
my ancestors.ComposingThe tune and the lyrics happened simultaneously. I had a 
thought, a message and so I put it on paper and added a beat and recorded it. 
We have also shot a video for it, which has been directed by Yugander VV.The 
songThe idea is to hold on to the identity of ‘Blaaze’, but in a sincere way. 
It’s actually the name Lakshmi Narasimha, which forms the foundation of the 
song. It reflects the
 beauty of Chennai from Mylapore to Anna Nagar. It is about my journey 
expressed in a reggae flow.Working with AR RahmanIt’s always a magical 
experience working on songs with AR Rahman. It’s a new thought, a reinvention 
every time. We all must do our bit to give back to the society. For us it’s 
been through music. With rap and reggae, the original intent was always to 
bring awareness and sing about issues, and it’s a blessing to keep singing and 
writing about things that matter.Chennai rootsI was born in Abhiramapuram, but 
grew up in Zambia and that made my longing for  home much stronger. The Sivan 
temple in Triplicane, the bank of Anjanneyar temple, the Kodi Puliar Kovil, 
Devi Cinemas, Kaijayanthi Bhavan, to the butter biscuit guy at the corner of 
the street — everything is special. The Marina beach was my favourite holiday 
spot as a kid.Would love toBring awareness to the world that this is the land 
of Thiruvalluvar’s greatest works
 relevant even today, and spread the Thirukurral everywhere, starting from this 
city which is my foundation, my birth, my future.The song will break on Radio 
One on Madras Day. It has been performed in Tamil and English and is a fine 
blend of rap, reggae and hip-hop and goes up to about four minutes.



      

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