Ravichandran and Hamsalekha 
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Ravichandran on Hamsalekha: 'Many celebrated our fallout more than our success'

An iconic duo, Ravichandran and Hamsalekha, reunite after years for the 'Crazy Brahma' concert

A Sharadhaa

The reunion of V Ravichandran and Hamsalekha, marking 40 years of their journey in the cinema industry, was expected to be a moment of nostalgia. Instead, it has also opened up a candid conversation about distance, perception, and the quiet complexities behind one of Kannada cinema’s most celebrated collaborations.

For a duo that defined the 1980s and '90s with chart-topping music and distinctive storytelling, their prolonged absence from working together remained a lingering question. For nearly two decades, they did not collaborate on a film or even a single song. Fans speculated, but neither addressed it directly — until now.

Speaking at the announcement of the ‘Crazy Brahma’ concert, Ravichandran chose honesty over sentiment. “When there was a crack between us, more people celebrated it,” he said, a remark that has since drawn attention. He acknowledged that such phases are not unusual in long creative partnerships. “Differences, ego, even success can create distance. But it is in that distance that you understand the value of what you had,” he added.

Ravichandran was equally clear that the separation was never defined by conflict. “We never sat down and fought,” he said, recalling that their equation was always rooted in work. Their collaboration, he explained, was less about visible camaraderie and more about an instinctive sync between writing, music, and visuals. It was this alignment that shaped some of their most enduring work.

He also credited Hamsalekha for influencing his early cinematic voice. “I did not know much in the beginning. It was through what he wrote that I understood how to translate emotion on screen,” he admitted. Their process, however, was far from smooth. He recalled rejecting multiple versions of a song before eventually returning to the original draft, a glimpse into a partnership built as much on disagreement as on trust.

As they come together now for a stage event rather than a film, both seem at ease with where they stand. The ‘Crazy Brahma’ concert is positioned as a celebration of their shared legacy, bringing their music back to audiences that have kept it alive over decades.

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