Top Indian Songs of the week 1st November 2025
If you are a musician wanting your new release to be heard and reviewed, submit your music here.Here are the best songs released in India across languages and genres for the week ending 1st November 20251. Thalaivan OruvanPerformed by : Santhosh Narayanan, OfRo, SVDP, The Indian Choral EnsembleComposed, arranged, and produced by Santhosh NarayananLyrics: Vivek, SVDPAdd. Programming & Backing Vocals: Karthik ManickavasakamLanguage: TamilGenre: Alternative/ ExperimentalMood: EnergeticIt is here finally, as Coke Studio Bharat gets an artist we all deserve, need, and have waited for. Santhosh Narayanan , to me, is at India’s pinnacle of musical greatness, especially in this generation. This is an anthem, something like a hero-elevation track that we all would have heard of in many of our movies, but when Sandthosh gets on board, it is glorified and not just elevated. There is none like him to explore all the major genres of music in India, and there is so much command and authenticity when he fuses these styles. Here it is the time to get Hip-hop, some mild folk, and orchestrated harmonies of the Gospel kind. The moment the track starts, you are lifted and placed into a higher orbit thanks to the scintillating harmonies by The Indian Choral Ensemble. The next time this 40-piece choral group performs in a city near you, make a visit and listen to them perform live. You will feel like the hand of God just touched you. Within seconds of the choral showers and heavy synths, 808Krshna gives you doses of adrenaline with the funky electronic elements. The production is epic, and the sound design tells you it is of a global benchmark and nothing short of that. TICE choir performers singing the title line, and it feels like the perfect way to welcome the leader among us, “thalaivan oruvan”. Karthik Manickavasakam, who co-founded TICE with Kalyani Nair, is the man behind all the choir arrangements and conducting. He also handles additional programming duties for this bazooka of a track. Vivek, who has collaborated so many times in Kollywood with Santhosh, knows exactly how to write such a song, and he perfectly brings the ingredients to convey the message “ a true leader rises for purpose, not power.” Santhosh performs the verse with his usual rawness, and that is the main attraction of his voice with his line “kakka vandha raana, vetta satham dhana”. A huge round of applause to the singers of the choir, with Yazhini, Nidhi, Rajeevi, Rutuja, Sushmita, Samanvitha, Sivaranjini, Asvitha, Amritha, Fathima, Bavathayini as Sopranos, Ananya, Geethu, Nayansee, Shri Badhra, Srimukhee, Varsha, Kaaviya, Megha, Sumathi, Prasanthi, Shruthy, Carola as Altos, Advaith, Akash, Arshith, Manikandan, Shivsundar, Shridhar, Sudharsan, Shibi, Manoj, Vivin as Tenors, and Prashanth,Shyam,Cyril and Neeraj as Basses. There is not a moment of reprieve, and the choir is relentlessly egging you on with their bravado and poise as singers. Can we get a Santhosh special without a brass section ? His brass section arrangements are always like Gold, and kudos to the performers, Babu, Viji, Ben, Karthick on Trumpets, and Maxi,Dominic,M. Balavignesh on the Trombone. My favourite line by Vivek is “Vetri tholvi ellam naame oothi bootham aakiyathu,” and this melody and arrangement remind me of another amazing Snathosh song, “ Nellu Vaasam” from the album ‘Vellai Yaanai’. Can you feel your body levitate when TICE performs “aagayam neet thaan, adayalam nee than”?. In the interlude, a very unique portion is Santhosh’s vocalization “ danga dang, danga dang,” and these are so crafty and clever, something that we have seen him do with songs like “Maya Visai” and “Nayadikal”. OfRo is better known for some fantastic hip-hop work in the indie and movie space, and here he delivers his best yet with the high-pitched vocals. You will never be able to believe that the same guy who performed “10000 Pax” sang these lines, “Oru aruvikku ethu ellai, neyum modhi paaru kallai kallai”. The frequent use of “Aagayam nee than” by TICE intervening is a great element and works quite well. When great performers come one after another, the audience just feels an endless joy, and that is what happens when SVDP comes on to spread the fire. How does he write these lines, “ yeah, 40 days nights spent in silence solo, separating the soul from what they see in those photos, developed in a dark room”?, with that “Hold on” in the background, Phew! The vision and his energy, SVDP, are something else! TICE keeps elevating at every instance with the vocalization, and Karthik needs all the love and appreciation for arranging and conducting this act. The mesmerising video is directed by Amith Krishnan. The tracks are mixed by Santhosh at Future Tense Studios, Chennai, and Rupendar Venkatesh does the additional mix and master. @ofrooooo @musicsanthosh @karthikmanickavasakam @theindianchoralensemble @cokestudiobharat @shan.vincent.de.paul @chillybeef @808krshna @devsanyal @lyricist_vivek @sajidmaklai @seharkaur @universalmusicindia 2. TumComposed and Sung by - Raghav KaushikLyrics by - Amrita SalujaMusic Producer - Nakul ChughLanguage: HindiGenre: PopMood: Pathos/EnergeticSome names can always be trusted because these musicians are committed, self-critical, and passionate, and if these are ingrained, their output will always bear the stamp of quality. Ragha is not only a savvy composer, but his singing and evocative powers of the voice are top-notch. You can feel it when he utters the very first word, “Tum”. Ishan Das plays the rhythm guitar as the sole accompaniment in the verse. “Muskaan mein chupi adaa ho tum, Khamoshi ko meri jo samje woh zubaan ho tum, jo poori na huyi woh dua ho tum” are the spectacular lines penned by Amrita Saluja. You don't need further explanation about the message, intent, and emotions running through the protagonist’s mind. As the verse starts again, we have a beautifully layered harmony section with backing vocalists of super abilities like Shreya Jain, Shriya Pareek, and Nakul Chugh. The song is produced adeptly by Nakul, and the video playing draws you in as well, thanks to Devika Mahajan, who has written and directed it. Raghav sings with such desperation as he says “ meri aakhri din ki saza ho tum” and it is time for Nakul to make some valiant changes to the song’s energy. Ishan powers up on the lead guitar, and the drums engage. Are you feeling the pain? You must be when Amrita a